Staff

Katherine Chen, Community Science and Outreach Manager
Katherine Chen, Community Science and Outreach Manager

Katherine Chen, Community Science and Outreach Manager
Originally from Ohio, Katherine first came to New York City to complete her master's degree work on weather effects on bird-window collisions. During her time as a master's student, she worked closely with NYC Audubon's Project Safe Flight data and in spring 2022, coordinated the Project Safe Flight collision monitoring volunteers. In June 2022, she joined NYC Audubon as the organization's community science and outreach manager.
A lifelong animal lover, Katherine enjoys new experiences working with all kinds of animals, from companion animals to livestock to wildlife. She is also fascinated with how humans interact with animals and vice versa and is excited to be helping create an urban environment that promotes coexistence among all species.
Katherine holds a BA in animal sciences from the Ohio State University and an MA in ecology, evolution, and conservation biology from Columbia University.
Email: kchen@nycaudubon.org
A lifelong animal lover, Katherine enjoys new experiences working with all kinds of animals, from companion animals to livestock to wildlife. She is also fascinated with how humans interact with animals and vice versa and is excited to be helping create an urban environment that promotes coexistence among all species.
Katherine holds a BA in animal sciences from the Ohio State University and an MA in ecology, evolution, and conservation biology from Columbia University.
Email: kchen@nycaudubon.org

Nicholas Comparato, Bird Survey Technician
Nicholas Comparato, Bird Survey Technician

Nicholas Comparato, Bird Survey Technician
Nicholas is a wildlife scientist focused on the bioacoustic study of bats and birds. He began his career in conservation as a volunteer with NYC Audubon’s Project Safe Flight, which gained him his first professional role as an avian monitoring technician with the National Park Service in the desert southwest. After returning to New York City, Nicholas earned a Master’s degree in biology. He developed an interest in bioacoustics after conducting research on bird song and park soundscapes as part of his graduate studies.
Nicholas’s research interests expanded to bats when he was given the opportunity to survey the bat populations of Westchester County using sonar recording devices in 2020. Since this first experience, he has assisted with bat studies in Costa Rica and led endangered bat monitoring at wind energy sites throughout the United States. He also has a forthcoming publication examining the relationship between urbanization and local bat diversity.
Nicholas’s research interests expanded to bats when he was given the opportunity to survey the bat populations of Westchester County using sonar recording devices in 2020. Since this first experience, he has assisted with bat studies in Costa Rica and led endangered bat monitoring at wind energy sites throughout the United States. He also has a forthcoming publication examining the relationship between urbanization and local bat diversity.
Nicholas fulfilled a long-term career ambition when he joined the NYC Audubon staff in 2023, where he assists with collision monitoring and bird surveys at green infrastructure sites throughout Manhattan.
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Matthew Coody, Director of Development
Matthew Coody, Director of Development
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Matthew Coody, Director of Development
Matthew Coody (he/him/his) joined NYC Audubon in April 2022 as the organization’s director of development. Originally from Texas, Matthew moved to New York City to attend graduate school and has since built a multifaceted career at not-for-profit organizations that focus on advocacy, community engagement, and preservation.
Matthew comes to NYC Audubon with over a decade of fundraising experience in the heritage, culture, and open space spheres. Most recently, he served as director of external affairs at the Historic House Trust of NYC, a public-private partnership with NYC Parks. There he led all development and communications efforts, crafted impactful programs, and advanced strategic partnerships. Prior to that role, Matthew was executive director of the New York Preservation Archive Project, a grassroots organization that experienced significant growth under his leadership.
Matthew currently serves on the board of directors of the New York Preservation Archive Project and the board of advisers of the Historic Districts Council, and is a member of the Historic House Trust’s accessibility advisory committee. In the past he has also served as vice president for Columbia University’s Preservation Alumni, and has been awarded scholarships to attend several conferences and international study programs.
Matthew earned a BS in architectural studies from the University of Texas and an MS in historic preservation from Columbia University. He is a longtime resident of Greenpoint, Brooklyn, where his most talkative neighbor is a crow that nests in a nearby tree. His fondest bird-related memory to date is snorkeling with Brown Pelicans as they dove for their lunch.
Email: mcoody@nycaudubon.org
Matthew comes to NYC Audubon with over a decade of fundraising experience in the heritage, culture, and open space spheres. Most recently, he served as director of external affairs at the Historic House Trust of NYC, a public-private partnership with NYC Parks. There he led all development and communications efforts, crafted impactful programs, and advanced strategic partnerships. Prior to that role, Matthew was executive director of the New York Preservation Archive Project, a grassroots organization that experienced significant growth under his leadership.
Matthew currently serves on the board of directors of the New York Preservation Archive Project and the board of advisers of the Historic Districts Council, and is a member of the Historic House Trust’s accessibility advisory committee. In the past he has also served as vice president for Columbia University’s Preservation Alumni, and has been awarded scholarships to attend several conferences and international study programs.
Matthew earned a BS in architectural studies from the University of Texas and an MS in historic preservation from Columbia University. He is a longtime resident of Greenpoint, Brooklyn, where his most talkative neighbor is a crow that nests in a nearby tree. His fondest bird-related memory to date is snorkeling with Brown Pelicans as they dove for their lunch.
Email: mcoody@nycaudubon.org

Wesley Craig, Seasonal Field Technician

Wesley Craig, Seasonal Field Technician
Wesley Craig is a field technician for NYC Audubon's Herring Gull Conservation and Management Program at the Javits Center green roofs. Wesley graduated from the College of William & Mary in 2018 with a B.S. in Biology and a minor in Biochemistry. Before joining NYC Audubon, Wesley worked at the Elizabeth A. Morton NWR as a shorebird intern monitoring populations of nesting shorebirds, including piping plovers, least terns, and American oystercatchers. More recently, he worked with the East Bay Regional Parks District on various trail and campsite maintenance projects. Wesley worked as a field technician with NYC Audubon in 2022 and 2023, monitoring Herring Gull nesting and behavioral response to management on the Javits green roof.

Myles Davis, Senior Manager, Green Infrastructure

Myles Davis, Senior Manager, Green Infrastructure
Myles first joined the NYC Audubon team as field technician for our Herring Gull Conservation and Management Program in 2021. Subsequently, he completed a master’s degree in Conservation Biology, where he used wildlife trail cameras to understand how mammals are distributed throughout New York City’s greenspaces, and established a camera transect to monitor city wildlife across a gradient of urban intensity in the process. Myles returned to NYC Audubon in May 2023 as our senior manager of green infrastructure.
Myles has worked on a wide range of ecological projects, from studying semi-wild Elephant behavior and ecotourism in Thailand, to Colobus monkey crop raiding in Tanzania. As a Brooklyn native, Myles is excited to channel his passion for conservation and outreach towards protecting the city’s avian habitats and connecting New Yorkers with the local bird community. Myles can often be found running in Prospect Park, bouldering, or eating at one of the city’s many food festivals.
Myles graduated from Colgate University in 2015 with a BA in Biology and from Columbia University in 2023 with a MA in Ecology, Evolution, and Conservation Biology.
Email: mdavis@nycaudubon.org
Email: mdavis@nycaudubon.org

Aidan Donaghy, Development Associate
Aidan Donaghy, Development Associate

Aidan Donaghy, Development Associate
Aidan Donaghy (he/him/his) joined NYC Audubon in June 2022 as the organization's development associate. A lifelong nature-lover, he came to New York from Kentucky in 2017 to attend university and has since enjoyed familiarizing himself with the City's diverse communities and beautiful public parks. He has volunteered at parks and community gardens across Manhattan and the Bronx and believes in the importance of preserving New York's built and natural environments so that they can be safely enjoyed by all its residents—bird, human, or otherwise! Having completed internships in education and nonprofit programming, he is excited to use his experience to ensure NYC Audubon has the resources it needs to continue its amazing conservation and advocacy work.
Aidan holds a BA in anthropology and humanitarian studies from Fordham University, where he also served as secretary of the Environmental Club and president of the Humanitarian Student Union. His favorite bird-related memory is visiting a parrot and toucan sanctuary in Brazil.
Email: adonaghy@nycaudubon.org
Aidan holds a BA in anthropology and humanitarian studies from Fordham University, where he also served as secretary of the Environmental Club and president of the Humanitarian Student Union. His favorite bird-related memory is visiting a parrot and toucan sanctuary in Brazil.
Email: adonaghy@nycaudubon.org

Monika Dorsey, Controller
Monika Dorsey, Controller

Monika Dorsey, Controller
Monika honed her skills in accounting, office functions, and management through varied business services, working with accountants, auditors, business owners, and executives over the last 35 years. With her bachelor’s degree from New York University in biology, concentrating on field studies and with a minor in geology, working with New York City Audubon is the realization of lifelong interests. She is very excited to have joined this grassroot nonprofit organization as controller, where her passions have finally met work life. Monika loves to travel and has visited many different states and countries.
Email: mdorsey@nycaudubon.org
Email: mdorsey@nycaudubon.org

Susan Elbin, PhD, Conservation Scientist Emerita
SUSAN ELBIN, PhD, CONSERVATION SCIENTIST EMERITA

Susan Elbin, PhD, Conservation Scientist Emerita
Retired in December 2019 from her position as NYC Audubon's director of conservation and science, Dr. Susan Elbin is an ornithologist who has worked in the field of behavioral ecology and conservation for more than 25 years. Susan's specialties are avian behavioral ecology and conservation of colonial waterbirds. She is the chair of the Ornithological Council and, locally, co-chair of the Harbor Herons Subcommittee of the Restoration Committee for the Harbor Estuary Program. Susan is an adjunct professor at Columbia University where she teaches courses in ornithology and migration ecology.
Before coming to NYC Audubon, Susan was the director of the Wildlife Trust's New York Bioscape Initiative, a regional, landscape-level approach to issues of human health, wildlife health, and ecosystem health. She has also worked in several departments at the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), including the Education and Ornithology Departments and the Science Resource Center of the Bronx Zoo. While at WCS she led a variety of projects including studies of avian ecology and behavior in disturbed or restored grassland habitats and of birds' social behavior and use of space in exhibits at the Bronx Zoo. Susan has also been involved with conservation on an international scale, working with biologists from Argentina to Indonesia to South Africa. She is currently active in conservation in her hometown, having served for five years on the planning board for five years for the town of Parsippany, NJ, and being currently on its environmental advisory committee.
Susan holds an MS degree in ecology from the Pennsylvania State University and a PhD in ecology and evolution from Rutgers University.
Email: selbin@nycaudubon.org
Before coming to NYC Audubon, Susan was the director of the Wildlife Trust's New York Bioscape Initiative, a regional, landscape-level approach to issues of human health, wildlife health, and ecosystem health. She has also worked in several departments at the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), including the Education and Ornithology Departments and the Science Resource Center of the Bronx Zoo. While at WCS she led a variety of projects including studies of avian ecology and behavior in disturbed or restored grassland habitats and of birds' social behavior and use of space in exhibits at the Bronx Zoo. Susan has also been involved with conservation on an international scale, working with biologists from Argentina to Indonesia to South Africa. She is currently active in conservation in her hometown, having served for five years on the planning board for five years for the town of Parsippany, NJ, and being currently on its environmental advisory committee.
Susan holds an MS degree in ecology from the Pennsylvania State University and a PhD in ecology and evolution from Rutgers University.
Email: selbin@nycaudubon.org

Emilia Zhang Heaton, Seasonal Field Technician
Emilia Zhang Heaton, Seasonal Field Technician

Emilia Zhang Heaton, Seasonal Field Technician
Emilia Zhang Heaton is a seasonal field technician monitoring shorebirds for our Waterbirds of New York Harbor program. A native New Yorker, Emilia moved to Florida to get a BS in environmental studies and psychology from Eckerd College. Her studies lead to a passion for conservation psychology—the study of the reciprocal relationships between humans and nature, to encourage conservation. Since graduating and coming back to New York City, Emilia has been a research analyst at a brand strategy and marketing firm. Emilia started with NYC Audubon by teaming up with Emilio Tobón to survey the American Oystercatcher population in Queens, and now conducts field and lab work for several NYC Audubon research projects.
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Olivia Liang, Communications Associate
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Olivia Liang, Communications Associate
Olivia Liang (she/hers) joined the NYC Audubon team in September 2023. As Communications Associate, Olivia is working to grow our organization's visibility and reach new audiences by promoting our conservation, advocacy, and engagement work throughout the City.
Before working for NYC Audubon, Olivia was a Contributing Editor for SRQ Magazine in Sarasota, FL. She then wrote for the national nonprofit Green America, reporting on green finance, clean energy, green living, and environmental and social justice.
Olivia graduated from Washington University in St. Louis in 2021, double majoring in English and Spanish with a minor in Design. In 2023, she completed her MFA for Nonfiction Writing from Columbia University.
Email: oliang@nycaudubon.org

Andrew Maas, Associate Director of Communications
Andrew Maas, Associate Director of Communications

Andrew Maas, Associate Director of Communications
Andrew Maas (he/him/his) is excited to be part of the incredible team at NYC Audubon and work towards bird and environmental conservation in the City's five boroughs. Born and raised in New York City, Andrew has always appreciated the wilder side of the City, most notably Central Park. From his time at NYC Audubon he has learned about many of the other natural wonders in the City, including Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge, Pelham Bay Park, and the "Harbor Herons" islands of Swinburne Island and the Brother Islands.
Andrew holds a BA in communications and media studies from Fordham University.
Email: amaas@nycaudubon.org
Saman Mahmood, Director of Advocacy and Engagement
Saman Mahmood, Director of Advocacy and Engagement
Saman Mahmood, Director of Advocacy and Engagement
Saman Mahmood (she/her) joined the NYC Audubon team in August 2023. As the organization’s Director of Advocacy and Engagement, Saman’s extensive expertise bridging government relations, grassroots campaigns, and effective communication will bolster NYC Audubon’s efforts to protect urban biodiversity and make the city more sustainable for birds and people.
In her previous role with the Richmond County District Attorney's Community Partnership Unit, Saman demonstrated exceptional skills in raising awareness about critical public safety issues. Saman’s collaboration with key stakeholders, including the NYPD, government agencies, and elected officials, has consistently fostered effective communication channels, enhanced relationships and promoting a positive public image.
In her role as Deputy District Director for Congressman Max Rose in the U. S House of Representatives, Saman managed complex operations involving staff, interns, and external stakeholders. Their expertise in constituent services, community relations, and legislative matters played a pivotal role in driving the congressman's mission. Saman's dedication to building and maintaining relationships across federal, state, and local levels showcases their strong networking skills and commitment to effective governance.
A native Staten Islander with a master’s in public administration from C.U.N.Y Baruch Marxe School of Public and International Affairs and a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science and International Studies from C.U.N.Y College of Staten Island, Saman combines academic rigor with practical experience to bring a holistic approach to community engagement, government relations, and public service. With a career marked by impactful contributions and a commitment to public welfare, Saman Mahmood continues to be a driving force for positive change and effective leadership.
Email: smahmood@nycaudubon.org
Email: smahmood@nycaudubon.org
Jesse McLaughlin, Advocacy and Engagement Associate
Jesse McLaughlin, Advocacy and Engagement Associate
Jesse McLaughlin, Advocacy and Engagement Associate
Jesse McLaughlin (he/him/his) joined NYC Audubon in July 2022 as the organization’s advocacy and engagement associate through the FAO Schwarz Fellowship. Jesse comes to NYC Audubon with a background in trans-disciplinary research, conservation advocacy, and inquiry-based education. Most recently, he served as a field research panelist at Hudson River Park's Marine Science Festival and an artist consultant for the NY/NJ Harbor Estuary Program’s Citizen Advisory Council, illustrating how art can generate community-driven participation in climate justice. Prior to his role at NYC Audubon, Jesse was co-coordinator of Project Green Reach at Brooklyn Botanic Garden, a hands-on science program for Title I schools in Brooklyn.
Jesse holds a BA with a concentration entitled “Compassionate Art Practices as Transspecies Ecojustice” from NYU Gallatin School of Individualized Study. He cohabitates with a family of European Starlings who have made themselves at home in a wall of his Brooklyn apartment.
Email: jmclaughlin@nycaudubon.org
Email: jmclaughlin@nycaudubon.org

Dustin Partridge, PhD, Director of Conservation and Science
Dustin Partridge, PhD, Director of Conservation and Science

Dustin Partridge, PhD, Director of Conservation and Science
Dr. Dustin Partridge (he/him/his), NYC Audubon’s director of conservation and science, has worked with NYC Audubon in various roles since 2014, starting with what was then a “pilot” project monitoring biodiversity on the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center’s green roof. As NYC Audubon’s green infrastructure programming grew, so did Dustin’s role with the organization, as he led projects including Kingsland Wildflowers Green Roof in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, and Justice Avenue’s bioswale in Elmhurst, Queens. Dustin also created and serves as managing director of the Green Roof Researchers Alliance (GRRA), a consortium of over 70 scientists and policy makers from 22 institutions providing unbiased outreach, advocacy, and scientific understanding of green roofs in New York City. Joining NYC Audubon’s staff in 2022 in his expanded role of director of conservation and science, Dustin leads the organization’s team of on-the-ground scientists focused on species and habitat conservation and our signature Green Infrastructure, Project Safe Flight, and Waterbirds of New York Harbor programs.
Dustin’s research focuses on the role of green infrastructure in wildlife conservation, ecological community formation, and how to create high-quality habitat for birds in urban landscapes. His advocacy work focuses on the equitable distribution of green infrastructure across New York City. Early in Dustin’s career, he spent time banding birds throughout the northeast and studying marine mammal behavior in the Florida Keys. More recently, Dustin was a scientist at HDR Engineering, where his work focused on marine and terrestrial wildlife in and around New York Harbor. Dustin has been involved in many types of projects, including the monitoring of marine fisheries, renewable energy planning, endangered species surveys, and habitat restoration.
Dustin holds an adjunct position at Columbia University, where he teaches conservation biology and is an active mentor on committees at universities throughout New York City. He earned a PhD in biology and a certificate of advanced study in conservation biology from Fordham University. He is a lifelong resident of the New York area and currently lives in Morris County, New Jersey, with his family.
Email: dpartridge@nycaudubon.org
For media inquiries or interview requests with Dustin, please contact comms@nycaudubon.org
For media inquiries or interview requests with Dustin, please contact comms@nycaudubon.org

Denis Ramos, Seasonal Field Technician

Denis Ramos, Seasonal Field Technician
Denis Ramos is a field technician for NYC Audubon's Herring Gull Conservation and Management Program at the Javits Center Green Roof. Denis recently graduated SUNY Oswego with a B.S. in Zoology where he helped research Northern Cardinal Urban Ecology alongside professor Dr. Daniel Baldassare and is now a co-author in his latest publication. Prior to NYC Audubon, Denis worked in a veterinary clinic. In his role as a field technician, Denis monitors Herring Gull nesting and behavioral response to management on the Javits green roof.

Roslyn Rivas, Public Programs Manager
Roslyn Rivas, Public Programs Manager

Roslyn Rivas, Public Programs Manager
Roslyn Rivas (she/her) joined NYC Audubon in August 2022 as our new public programs manager. Born and raised in the Bronx, Roslyn loves exploring the City, visiting parks, and staying active by birding, playing sports, paddling, and more. She also spends time volunteering with environmental organizations around New York City, especially in the Bronx. As a wildlife conservationist, Roslyn especially enjoys studying animal behavior. She is an advocate for social justice in and out of the environmental field, and is passionate about making the world a more sustainable and equitable place.
Roslyn graduated from Yale University in 2017 with a BS in ecology & evolutionary biology, and earned a graduate certificate in wildlife management from Oregon State University in 2021.
Email: rrivas@nycaudubon.org
Roslyn graduated from Yale University in 2017 with a BS in ecology & evolutionary biology, and earned a graduate certificate in wildlife management from Oregon State University in 2021.
Email: rrivas@nycaudubon.org

Anne Schwartz, Institutional Giving Manager
Anne Schwartz, Institutional Giving Manager

Anne Schwartz, Institutional Giving Manager
Anne Schwartz (she/her) joined the staff of NYC Audubon in June 2017 as institutional giving manager. After growing up watching sprawl replace the fields and forests of the Hudson Valley, she has dedicated her career as a writer and editor to communicating about environmental issues. In the 1980s and 90s, she was an editor at Garden magazine of the New York Botanical Garden, which sounded an early alarm on climate change, tropical deforestation, and the worldwide loss of plant diversity, and at the National Audubon Society, where she edited the Audubon Activist. As the parks columnist for Gotham Gazette from 1999 to 2012, she covered policy, politics, and news related to the city’s parks and natural areas. She also produced digital and fundraising communications for environmental nonprofits including The Conservation Campaign and Open Space Institute.
She has published articles in Audubon, Land & People, and other magazines, and is the author of Rescuing Wetlands Close to Home, published by the Trust for Public Land. A resident of Brooklyn, Anne always looks for a chance to get outdoors, whether to research a story, walk with a friend in Prospect Park, or hike and canoe in the wild.
Anne has a BA in literature from Bennington College, and a certificate in conservation and environmental sustainability from Columbia University’s Earth Institute.
Email: aschwartz@nycaudubon.org

Junko Suzuki, Bird Survey Technician
Junko Suzuki, Bird Survey Technician

Junko Suzuki, Bird Survey Technician
Junko Suzuki is a Bird Survey Technician assisting with a monitoring study of green roofs and terraces in Manhattan. She is excited to join NYC Audubon’s urban biodiversity research, an interest that has emerged from over 20 years of birding and citizen-science research in New York City.
Originally from Japan, Junko moved to the City in 1989. Encounters with a Mourning Dove and male House Finch on a fire escape feeder eventually led her to Central Park, where she became a keen observer of migration as well as the dynamics of its breeding birds. In particular, she has studied and become fascinated by the family behaviors of Eastern Kingbirds. Since 2019, she has volunteered for the Ornithology Department of the American Museum of Natural History, working with its collection of birds from Japan. She has also served on the council of the Linnaean Society of New York.
Junko’s professional background is in media consulting, marketing, and design. Her last job was for UJA-Federation of New York, where she worked as an in-house graphic designer for 12 years. She is also an accomplished writer in Japanese and reviewed New York theater for more than 10 years for Japanese media.
Originally from Japan, Junko moved to the City in 1989. Encounters with a Mourning Dove and male House Finch on a fire escape feeder eventually led her to Central Park, where she became a keen observer of migration as well as the dynamics of its breeding birds. In particular, she has studied and become fascinated by the family behaviors of Eastern Kingbirds. Since 2019, she has volunteered for the Ornithology Department of the American Museum of Natural History, working with its collection of birds from Japan. She has also served on the council of the Linnaean Society of New York.
Junko’s professional background is in media consulting, marketing, and design. Her last job was for UJA-Federation of New York, where she worked as an in-house graphic designer for 12 years. She is also an accomplished writer in Japanese and reviewed New York theater for more than 10 years for Japanese media.

Kathleen Telesco, Seasonal Field Technician

Kathleen Telesco, Seasonal Field Technician
In her role as a seasonal field technician with NYC Audubon, Kathleen surveys the amazing diversity of birds on the City's green roofs and terraces. Kathleen grew up catching frogs and salamanders in her backyard, but became fascinated with birds after taking a course through the Acopian Center for Ornithology at Muhlenberg College. She continued learning as much as she could about birds by reading, and birding locally and abroad. For the past year she has volunteered in the rehabilitation clinic at the Sharon Audubon Center, helping to rehabilitate diverse bird species (and the occasional porcupine or turtle). Some of her favorite fledglings to care for are chimney swifts, a specialty of the clinic. If you’re not careful she’ll talk your ear off about them and may even bring you to a favorite roosting site.
Kathleen has furthered her education by completing a wildlife wound and pain management course through IWRC, and is working toward getting her rehabilitation license. She runs a photography and graphic design business and outside of work is a painter and singer-songwriter. She graduated from Muhlenberg College with a BA in Media & Communication and Studio Art.

Emilio Tobón, Conservation Field Biologist
Emilio Tobón, Conservation Field Biologist

Emilio Tobón, Conservation Field Biologist
Born in Mexico City, Emilio has studied seabirds all across the globe. His bachelor’s thesis at the National Autonomous University of Mexico was in the ecology and behavior of the Elegant Tern at Isla Rasa in the Gulf of California. His PhD research studied the ecology and behavior of the Magnificent Frigatebird during chick development in Isla Isabel, off Mexico’s Pacific Coast. For five years, he worked to study and conserve seabirds in the “Seabird Capital of the World,” New Zealand.
Emilio moved to New York City in 2008 and soon after volunteered on several different NYC Audubon Harbor Herons projects under the direction of Dr. Susan Elbin. Since 2011, he has been conducting surveys of the American Oystercatcher population in Breezy Point, Queens, as well as assisting with field work for several other NYC Audubon conservation projects, including testing bird-friendly glass at their testing tunnel at the Bronx Zoo from 2014 to 2016.
Email: etobon@nycaudubon.org

Jessica G. Wilson, Executive Director
Jessica G. Wilson, Executive Director

Jessica Wilson, Executive Director
Jessica G. Wilson (she/her) joined NYC Audubon in January 2022 as the organization’s executive director. A lifelong New Yorker and birder, Jessica’s interest in urban wildlife has shaped her career focused on environmental impact, fundraising, and community engagement.
Jessica came to NYC Audubon with deep experience with the City’s green spaces and natural areas. She joined NYC Audubon from the Friends of Governors Island, where as chief development officer she led fundraising for the organization and built support for the Island’s broader climate, public space, and art initiatives. Prior to her work for Governors Island, Jessica was VP, development & marketing at the Prospect Park Alliance, where she developed partnerships and strategies to enhance outreach, build community, and drive fundraising capacity.
Jessica has also led engagement efforts in alumni relations at Columbia University and at the National Audubon Society, where she built brand awareness and expanded digital outreach and online fundraising efforts to reach a broader and more diverse audience. Additionally, Jessica worked for a number of years managing marketing programs for American Express and for several science education organizations in marketing and publishing.
Jessica earned a BA in biology from Amherst College and an MBA from Columbia Business School; she grew up in Manhattan and now lives in Brooklyn with her family.
Read more about Jessica on our blog, Syrinx.
Email: jessica@nycaudubon.org
For media inquiries or interview requests with Jessica, please contact comms@nycaudubon.org
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Tod Winston, Birding Guide and Urban Biodiversity Specialist
Tod Winston, Birding Guide and Urban Biodiversity Specialist
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Tod Winston, Birding Guide and Urban Biodiversity Specialist
Tod Winston (he/him/his) wears several NYC Audubon hats. In his role as Urban Biodiversity Specialist, Tod conducts bird surveys at several high-profile green spaces across the city including Madison Square Park and the Javits Center green roof. As one of NYC Audubon's birding guides, he teaches our Beginning Birding course and leads walks and trips around the city including the popular spring Birding by Ear series. Read more about Tod's work as one of our guides.
Tod began working with NYC Audubon in 2007 as a volunteer writer for The Urban Audubon member newsletter and surveyor for the Harbor Herons Nesting Survey. Since then he has served in many roles including Associate Director of Content, Program Manager, Communications Manager, and Conservation Research Associate, where he led NYC Audubon's Harbor Herons Nesting Survey and helped with wading bird and cormorant bird-banding. Tod also worked for several years at National Audubon Society, as Program Manager for the organization's Plants for Birds project.
A lifelong birder who got to know the wonders of the natural world in the company of his nature-loving father, Tod is grateful to spend his time bringing new people to the joy of birds and aiding in their conservation. Tod holds a BA in psychology from Oberlin College and a certificate in postbaccalaureate basic sciences from Columbia University.
A lifelong birder who got to know the wonders of the natural world in the company of his nature-loving father, Tod is grateful to spend his time bringing new people to the joy of birds and aiding in their conservation. Tod holds a BA in psychology from Oberlin College and a certificate in postbaccalaureate basic sciences from Columbia University.
Email: twinston@nycaudubon.org