People

David Yarnold

Former President and CEO (2010 to 2021), National Audubon Society

David Yarnold became Audubon's 10th president in September 2010, charged with leading a turnaround that would expand Audubon's effectiveness while building on the organization's strong conservation legacy.  Under his leadership, Audubon's distributed network is becoming a coordinated, collaborative force for hemispheric conservation. With 463 local Chapters, 22 state offices and 44 Audubon Centers across the country, Audubon connects nearly four million people using science, advocacy and education. "We are all Audubon," Yarnold says. "No other organization has our wingspan when it comes to being able to drive conservation action, whether in individual backyards or in Congress."

Under Yarnold's leadership, Audubon is aligning its conservation work along migratory flyways, the "superhighways in the sky" that millions of birds travel each spring and fall.  "Flyways transcend geographical and political boundaries," he said. "They give us a literal birds-eye view of environmental issues and trends, and help direct our work.  Sometimes this leads us to hands-on restoration, like keeping Nebraska's Platte River vital for the Sandhill Cranes and many other species that depend on it, and sometimes it leads us to critical legislative needs, like ensuring that penalties from the gulf oil catastrophe are used to fund gulf restoration."  Yarnold oversees Audubon's Important Bird Area program, which protects 370 million acres along the flyways in the US and frames our work with BirdLife International and other conservation organizations around the globe.

With expertise in climate and energy issues, Yarnold has made environmentally-friendly siting for renewable energy one of his highest priorities at Audubon. He has launched numerous innovative social media efforts, including a national movement called "Conservation Has No Party." And he has put cutting-edge mapping technology at the center of Audubon's reinvention. His global background has deepened Audubon's alliances with BirdLife International and other partners to build a hemispheric air bridge for birds as they migrate across the flyways of the Americas. 

Yarnold came to Audubon from the Environmental Defense Fund, where he played a leading role in expanding partnerships with corporations and helped double revenue. He also led the organization's political action arm and was its leading U.S.-based advocate for the creation of environmental markets in China.  A former Pulitzer Prize-winning editor at the San Jose Mercury News, he is an outspoken and eloquent advocate for birds and the environment.

Yarnold writes op eds and columns for Huffington Post, forbes.com, CNN, McClatchy News Service, and others.  APM's "Marketplace" quoted Yarnold, "This is not your grandmother's Audubon anymore." He has appeared on CNN, NPR, MSNBC, BBC, PBS News Hour, and The Colbert Report.

He is a marathoner, an earnest birder and he still reads sports news in the morning before anything else.

Follow Yarnold on Twitter (@David_Yarnold) and on The Huffington Post

To request photos or an interview with David Yarnold, contact:

Media Relations
media@audubon.org
212-979-3100

For speaking requests and general correspondence, contact:

Ginger Pinto
Senior Assistant to the President & CEO
ginger.pinto@audubon.org
212-979-3088

Articles by David Yarnold

Audubon View
May 23, 2012 — Major wind developers have pledged to voluntarily incorporate bird-friendly guidelines in the construction of new wind energy projects and to modify existing turbines. 
Audubon View
April 05, 2012 — The Audubon network has achieved major accomplishments where climate and energy are concerned. It's prepared to take on more.
Audubon View
January 01, 2012 — The National Audubon Society has had many achievements, but the best is yet to come with its new strategic plan.
Audubon View
November 02, 2011 — From Audubon's deep roots, a modern social networking movement grows.
Birding the Net: A New Way to Experience Birds
November 01, 2011
Audubon View
September 26, 2011 — Can our conservation efforts embrace our nation's demography?
A Field Report From Audubon
October 19, 2010

 

 

Favorite birds
Flesh-footed Shearwater
Shearwaters and Petrels
Pink-footed Shearwater
Shearwaters and Petrels
Eared Quetzal
Trogons
Great Shearwater
Shearwaters and Petrels