Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American environmentalist Roger Tory Peterson.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Roger Tory Peterson was an American naturalist, ornithologist, illustrator and educator, and one of the founding inspirations for the 20th-century environmental movement.
I can recognize the calls of practically every bird in North America. There are some in Africa I don't know, though.
I consider myself to have been the bridge between the shotgun and the binoculars in bird watching. Before I came along, the primary way to observe birds was to shoot them and stuff them.
Not all is doom and gloom. We are beginning to understand the natural world and are gaining a reverence for life - all life.
Birds are indicators of the environment. If they are in trouble, we know we'll soon be in trouble.
Birds have wings; they're free; they can fly where they want when they want. They have the kind of mobility many people envy.
Butterflies may be better indicators of the health of our environment than birds.
Birds are, perhaps, the most eloquent expression of reality.
More birds have adapted to a changing world than have failed. Very few have the narrow tolerance of the ivory-billed woodpecker or the Bachman's warbler.
Of all the various out-door recreations I have tried, when it comes to genuine, exciting sport, give me hunting with a camera.
The more you look, the more you will see.
Birding, after all, is just a game. Going beyond that is what is important.
The truth of the matter is, the birds could very well live without us, but many -- perhaps all -- of us would find life incomplete, indeed almost intolerable without the birds.
I can recognize the calls of practically every bird in North America. There are some in Africa I don't know, though
Vultures are homely, but they clean up all the garbage and that's good. And they're elegant in the sky.
We don't have to go to wild places to find wildlife. A surprisingly wide range of species can be found in our sities and towns, from familiar animals like the raccoon to more exotic ones like the mountain lion.
The philosophy that I have worked under most of my life is that the serious study of natural history is an activity which has far-reaching effects in every aspect of a person's life. It ultimately makes people protective of the environment in a very committed way. It is my opinion that the study of natural history should be the primary avenue for creating environmentalists.
Conservation is not just an ideal that we read about; it works.
Birds ... are sensitive indicators of the environment, a sort of "ecological litmus paper," ... The observation and recording of bird populations over time lead inevitably to environmental awareness and can signal impending changes.
Birds, it must be admitted, are the most exciting and most deserving of the vertebrates; they are perhaps the best entre into the study of natural history, and a very good wedge into conservation awareness.
Butterflies are very interesting. Here these things are little grubs for a while. And then they go into a little coffin. There they are in a sarcophagus, and then they come out and dance with the angels.
Penguins are an indicator of the health of our watery planet, and if they are unable to survive, we had better take notice or we might find our own survival threatened.
The other creatures with which we share this world have their rights too, but not speaking our language, they have no voice, no vote; it is our moral duty to take care of them.
Birds are an ecological litmus paper.
My father said you can't make a living in birds, my relatives all went into business: bankers, stockbrokers. However, they eventually lost it all and died in wheelchairs. Sometimes you have to be a little aberrant.