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Cape May, located at the southern tip of New Jersey, is renowned as among the most significant birding hotspots in the United States. This coastal town, situated on the Delaware Bay, serves as a critical stopover for migratory birds traveling along the Atlantic Flyway, a major bird migration route. The area's unique geography, characterized by its barrier islands, marshes, and open waters, creates an ideal environment for a diverse array of bird species. Over 400 species of birds have been documented in the region, making it a magnet for ornithologists, amateur birdwatchers, and conservationists. The seasonal influx of migratory birds, particularly during spring and fall, draws thousands of visitors annually, contributing to both the ecological and economic vitality of the area. Cape May's birding opportunities are further enhanced by its proximity to the Cape May Point State Park and the nearby Delaware Bay, which together form a vital ecosystem for shorebirds, waterfowl, and raptors. This natural heritage has cemented Cape May's reputation as a premier destination for birdwatching in the Northeast.
Cape May, located at the southern tip of New Jersey, is recognized as one of the most significant birding hotspots in the United States. The town sits at the confluence of the Atlantic Ocean and the Delaware Bay, a position that gives it disproportionately significant ecological importance for migratory birds traveling along the Atlantic Flyway. Its peninsula geography, characterized by salt marshes, coastal dunes, freshwater impoundments, and maritime shrubland, creates a concentration effect: birds funneling south along the Eastern Seaboard reach the tip of the peninsula and pause, sometimes in enormous numbers, before crossing the bay or the ocean. More than 400 species have been documented in the Cape May region, according to records maintained by the Cape May Bird Observatory (CMBO) and the Cornell Lab of Ornithology's eBird platform.<ref>[https://ebird.org/region/L109136 "Cape Island--South Cape May Meadows"], ''eBird, Cornell Lab of Ornithology''.</ref> That total draws ornithologists, casual birdwatchers, and conservationists from across North America and beyond.


The town's commitment to preserving its natural resources has been instrumental in maintaining its status as a birding hotspot. Local conservation efforts, supported by organizations such as the New Jersey Audubon Society, have focused on protecting critical habitats and minimizing human impact on migratory routes. These initiatives include habitat restoration projects, public education programs, and the establishment of protected areas that provide safe haven for nesting and feeding birds. The success of these efforts is evident in the continued presence of rare and endangered species, such as the red knot and the piping plover, which rely on the Delaware Bay's intertidal zones for sustenance during their long migratory journeys. Cape May's role in bird conservation extends beyond its natural attractions, as it hosts annual events like the Cape May Birding Festival, which brings together experts and enthusiasts to celebrate and study the region's avian diversity.
The seasonal influx of migratory birds, particularly during spring and fall, brings thousands of visitors each year. Every autumn, hundreds of thousands of birds move through the skies above Cape May, including raptors, shorebirds, waterfowl, and songbirds.<ref>[https://www.science.org/content/article/every-fall-hundreds-thousands-birds-soar-through-skies-above-new-jersey "Every fall, hundreds of thousands of birds soar through the skies above New Jersey"], ''Science'', American Association for the Advancement of Science.</ref> This annual spectacle contributes substantially to the town's economy and ecological profile alike. Conservation efforts, led by organizations including the New Jersey Audubon Society and supported by state and federal agencies, have focused on protecting the habitats that make these migrations possible. The continued presence of species such as the rufa red knot, listed as threatened under the U.S. Endangered Species Act in December 2014,<ref>[https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2014/12/11/2014-28338/endangered-and-threatened-wildlife-and-plants-threatened-species-status-for-the-rufa-red-knot "Threatened Species Status for the Rufa Red Knot"], ''Federal Register'', Vol. 79, No. 237, December 11, 2014.</ref> and the piping plover reflects the measurable impact of those efforts. Cape May has been designated a Globally Important Bird Area by BirdLife International and the National Audubon Society, a formal recognition that places it among a select group of sites considered critical to the long-term survival of bird populations at continental and global scales.<ref>[https://www.audubon.org/important-bird-areas/cape-may-peninsula "Cape May Peninsula Important Bird Area"], ''National Audubon Society''.</ref>


== History == 
Cape May's birding opportunities are anchored by Cape May Point State Park and the adjacent Delaware Bay shoreline, which together form a critical ecosystem for shorebirds, waterfowl, and raptors. The Cape May Bird Observatory, established in 1976, serves as the primary scientific and educational institution responsible for systematic hawk counts, banding operations, and public programming. Its hawk watch data, collected over decades, rank among the most cited raptor monitoring datasets in North America.
Cape May's history as a birding hotspot is deeply intertwined with its early settlement and the development of its natural resources. The area was first inhabited by the Lenni Lenape people, who recognized the ecological significance of the region long before European colonization. However, it was not until the 19th century that Cape May began to attract attention for its birdlife. During this period, the town emerged as a popular summer resort for wealthy Northerners, drawn by its scenic beauty and proximity to the ocean. This influx of visitors led to increased awareness of the area's biodiversity, with early naturalists documenting the presence of migratory birds in the region. By the late 1800s, Cape May had become a focal point for ornithological study, with scientists and amateur birdwatchers alike contributing to the growing body of knowledge about the area's avian population.


The 20th century saw a shift in focus toward conservation, as the ecological importance of Cape May became more widely recognized. The establishment of the Cape May Point State Park in 1961 marked a pivotal moment in the town's history, as it provided legal protection for the fragile habitats that support its birdlife. This development was part of a broader movement in the United States to preserve natural areas for both scientific study and public enjoyment. Over the decades, Cape May has continued to play a central role in birding research, with institutions such as the [[New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection]] collaborating with local organizations to monitor bird populations and address environmental threats. The town's historical commitment to conservation has ensured that its birding hotspot remains a vital resource for both scientists and nature enthusiasts. 
== History ==


== Geography == 
Cape May's history as a birding destination is rooted in its long ecological significance. The area was first inhabited by the Lenni Lenape people, who recognized the richness of its coastal and estuarine resources long before European settlement. European colonists began arriving in the seventeenth century, drawn by the same productive waters and sheltered shoreline. It wasn't until the nineteenth century, however, that Cape May began attracting explicit attention for its birdlife.
Cape May's geography is a defining factor in its status as a birding hotspot, shaped by its location at the southernmost point of New Jersey and its proximity to the Delaware Bay. The town's unique position at the confluence of the Atlantic Ocean and the bay creates a dynamic ecosystem that supports a wide range of bird species. The barrier islands, marshes, and coastal dunes that characterize the area provide essential stopover points for migratory birds traveling along the Atlantic Flyway. These habitats offer abundant food sources, shelter, and nesting opportunities, making Cape May an irreplaceable link in the chain of ecosystems that sustain avian life across the Eastern United States. The intertidal zones of the Delaware Bay, in particular, are critical for shorebirds such as the red knot, which rely on the area's rich invertebrate populations to fuel their long-distance migrations.


The topography of Cape May also plays a crucial role in attracting and sustaining bird populations. The town's coastal plain, which extends from the bay to the ocean, features a mosaic of habitats, including salt marshes, pine forests, and open water. These diverse environments support a variety of bird species, from waterfowl and wading birds to songbirds and raptors. The presence of the Cape May Lighthouse, a prominent landmark on the peninsula, further enhances the area's appeal to birdwatchers, as it offers an elevated vantage point for observing seabirds and migratory species. The surrounding wetlands and forests also serve as important breeding grounds for native birds, contributing to the region's ecological richness. This complex interplay of natural features ensures that Cape May remains a focal point for birding activities throughout the year.
During the 1800s, Cape May emerged as a popular summer resort for wealthy visitors from Philadelphia and New York, drawn by the ocean air and scenic coastline. The influx of educated travelers also brought early naturalists, who began documenting the region's remarkable diversity of migratory birds. By the latter decades of the century, ornithologists were treating Cape May as a focal point for field study, contributing observations that helped establish the foundational understanding of Atlantic Flyway migration patterns. The most comprehensive early synthesis of this work came from ornithologist Witmer Stone, whose two-volume ''Bird Studies at Old Cape May'', published in 1937 by the Delaware Valley Ornithological Club, remains a foundational reference for anyone studying the region's avifauna. Stone documented species accounts, seasonal patterns, and historical changes in bird populations with a rigor that set the standard for subsequent ornithological work in the region.<ref>Stone, Witmer. ''Bird Studies at Old Cape May: An Ornithology of Coastal New Jersey''. Delaware Valley Ornithological Club, 1937.</ref>


== Attractions == 
The shift toward formal conservation accelerated in the twentieth century. Cape May Point State Park was established in 1961, providing legal protection for the fragile habitats that support the peninsula's birdlife. The park's creation reflected a broader national movement to preserve ecologically significant natural areas and came amid growing scientific awareness that migratory stopovers were as critical to bird survival as breeding and wintering grounds.
Cape May offers a wealth of attractions that cater specifically to birdwatchers and nature enthusiasts. Among the most notable is the Cape May Point State Park, which spans over 1,000 acres and includes a variety of habitats such as salt marshes, forests, and coastal dunes. The park's boardwalks and trails provide access to prime birding spots, where visitors can observe species like the black skimmer, the great blue heron, and the osprey. The park also features a visitor center that offers educational programs, guided tours, and binoculars for use by visitors. Another key attraction is the [[Delaware Bay]], which is renowned for its role in the annual migration of the red knot, a species that relies on the bay's invertebrates for sustenance during its journey from South America to the Arctic. The bay's shallow waters and extensive shoreline make it an ideal location for spotting shorebirds, waterfowl, and seabirds.


In addition to its natural attractions, Cape May hosts several events and programs that enhance the birdwatching experience. The Cape May Birding Festival, held annually in October, brings together experts, researchers, and enthusiasts for a week of guided birding trips, lectures, and workshops. This event not only highlights the region's avian diversity but also raises awareness about conservation efforts. The town's historic districts and scenic viewpoints, such as the [[Cape May Lighthouse]], also provide opportunities for birdwatchers to combine their interests in nature with the area's rich cultural heritage. These attractions, combined with the town's commitment to preserving its natural resources, ensure that Cape May remains a premier destination for birding in the United States.
In 1976, the New Jersey Audubon Society founded the Cape May Bird Observatory. The CMBO's establishment marked a turning point in how Cape May's birdlife was studied and communicated to the public. The observatory began systematic hawk counts at the Cape May Point Hawk Watch platform, generating long-term population data for dozens of raptor species, including the sharp-shinned hawk, Cooper's hawk, merlin, and peregrine falcon. Those counts have continued annually and now constitute one of the longest unbroken raptor monitoring records in North America. Pete Dunne, a prominent ornithologist and author based at Cape May, helped bring the hawk watch and the broader birding culture of Cape May to national attention through his writing and advocacy during the 1980s and 1990s.<ref>Dunne, P., Sibley, D., and Sutton, C. (1988). ''Hawks in Flight''. Houghton Mifflin. (2nd ed. 2012.)</ref>


== Getting There == 
The late twentieth century also saw significant habitat restoration work. The Nature Conservancy undertook restoration of the South Cape May Meadows, converting former agricultural land and degraded coastal habitat into a managed freshwater and wetland complex that now serves as one of the most productive birding sites on the entire peninsula.<ref>[https://ebird.org/region/L109136 "Cape Island--South Cape May Meadows"], ''eBird, Cornell Lab of Ornithology''.</ref> The project stands as a concrete example of how targeted land management can reverse habitat loss and directly benefit migratory bird populations. By the early 2000s, Cape May's institutional infrastructure for birding, including the CMBO, state park programming, and a network of land conservation organizations, had made it one of the most scientifically monitored birding locations in the country.
Cape May's accessibility is a key factor in its popularity as a birding hotspot, with multiple transportation options available to visitors. The town is located approximately 150 miles south of New York City and 120 miles east of Philadelphia, making it easily reachable by car, train, or bus. The nearest major airports are Philadelphia International Airport (PHL) and Atlantic City International Airport (ACY), both of which offer direct flights from major cities. From these airports, visitors can rent a car or take a shuttle service to Cape May, which is about a two-hour drive from Philadelphia and a one-hour drive from Atlantic City. Public transportation options include regional rail services operated by [[New Jersey Transit]], which connects Cape May to cities such as Philadelphia and New York City via the Atlantic City Beach Station. Buses also run from nearby towns, providing an alternative for those without a car.


For those traveling by boat, Cape May's location on the Delaware Bay offers access to water-based transportation. The town has several marinas and boat ramps that cater to both recreational and commercial vessels. Ferry services from nearby ports, such as those in Cape May Court House and Stone Harbor, provide additional options for reaching the area. Once in Cape May, visitors can explore the town's birding trails on foot, by bicycle, or through guided tours offered by local organizations. The town's well-maintained roads and scenic routes make it easy to navigate, with signs directing visitors to key birdwatching spots such as the [[Cape May Point State Park]] and the [[Delaware Bay]]. These transportation options ensure that Cape May remains accessible to a wide range则 of visitors, from casual tourists to dedicated birdwatchers.
The [[New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection]] has collaborated with local organizations over the decades to monitor bird populations and address threats ranging from coastal development to water quality degradation in the Delaware Bay. These partnerships have ensured that Cape May's ecological significance remains backed by ongoing data collection and regulatory protection. Not without controversy, the management of horseshoe crab harvesting in the Delaware Bay, which is directly tied to shorebird survival, has required sustained negotiation between commercial fishing interests, state regulators, and conservation groups across multiple jurisdictions.


== Parks and Recreation ==
== Geography ==
Cape May's parks and recreational areas are integral to its identity as a birding hotspot, offering a combination of natural beauty and conservation-focused programming. The Cape May Point State Park, managed by the [[New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection]], is the most prominent of these spaces, providing over 1,000 acres of protected land that supports a diverse array of bird species. The park's trails, boardwalks, and observation decks allow visitors to explore habitats ranging from salt marshes to coastal forests, making it an ideal location for birdwatching year-round. In addition to its natural attractions, the park offers educational programs and guided tours led by experts, which help visitors identify species and understand the ecological significance of the area. These initiatives are part of a broader effort to promote environmental stewardship and raise awareness about the importance of preserving migratory bird habitats. 


Beyond the state park, Cape May's recreational offerings include a network of public parks, nature reserves, and wildlife sanctuaries that contribute to the town's ecological richness. The [[Delaware Bay]] itself is a critical component of this system, with its intertidal zones serving as a feeding ground for thousands of migratory birds. Local conservation groups, such as the [[New Jersey Audubon Society]], work closely with government agencies to protect these areas from development and pollution. The town also hosts several community events that celebrate its natural heritage, including birding festivals, photography contests, and citizen science projects that involve the public in monitoring bird populations. These efforts not only enhance the visitor experience but also ensure that Cape May's birding hotspot remains a sustainable resource for future generations.
Cape May's geography is the defining reason for its status as a birding hotspot. The peninsula sits at the southernmost point of New Jersey, where the Delaware Bay meets the Atlantic Ocean. This position creates a natural funnel: birds moving south along the coast or across the bay concentrate at the tip of the peninsula, particularly during fall migration, when northwest winds push migrants offshore and then into the Cape May corridor.


{{#seo: |title=Cape May Birding Hotspot — History, Facts & Guide | New Jersey.Wiki |description=Cape May, New Jersey, is a premier birding hotspot along the Atlantic Flyway, offering diverse habitats and conservation efforts for migratory birds. |type=Article }} 
The peninsula's habitats are diverse and ecologically distinct. Salt marshes line the bay shore, providing feeding and roosting habitat for wading birds, shorebirds, and waterfowl. The barrier beach along the Atlantic side supports nesting shorebirds, including the threatened piping plover, and offers foraging habitat for terns and skimmers. Freshwater impoundments, particularly at South Cape May Meadows and within Cape May Point State Park, attract a wide range of species that would otherwise bypass an entirely coastal environment. Maritime shrubland, dominated by bayberry, wax myrtle, and hawthorn, provides critical stopover habitat for neotropical songbirds during both spring and fall migrations. Pine barrens extend northward from the peninsula and contribute additional habitat complexity.
[[Category:New Jersey landmarks]
 
[[Category:New Jersey history]]
The intertidal zones of the Delaware Bay are ecologically critical in their own right. Each spring, shortly before and after full moons in May and June, horseshoe crabs come ashore in massive numbers to spawn along the bay's sandy beaches. The eggs they deposit are a concentrated, high-lipid food source, and the rufa red knot depends on this resource almost entirely to refuel for the final leg of its migration from South America to the Arctic. The relationship is precise and unforgiving: red knots arrive at Delaware Bay after a non-stop flight of several thousand miles from their wintering grounds in southern South America, with fat reserves nearly depleted, and must roughly double their body weight within two weeks to fuel the remaining journey to Arctic breeding grounds. Thousands of red knots, along with ruddy turnstones, sanderlings, and semipalmated sandpipers, converge on the Delaware Bay beaches annually to exploit this food pulse. Without sufficient horseshoe crab eggs, red knot survival rates decline sharply, a relationship documented in studies by Lawrence Niles and colleagues.<ref>Niles, L.J. et al. (2008). "Effects of Horseshoe Crab Harvest in Delaware Bay on Red Knots: Are Harvest Limits Sustainable?" ''BioScience'' 58(2): 153-160.</ref> The broader ecology of this system, including the cascading effects of horseshoe crab population changes on multiple shorebird species, is examined in detail by Burger and colleagues.<ref>Burger, Joanna, et al. ''Horseshoe Crabs and Shorebirds: The Story of a Food Web''. Stackpole Books, 2004.</ref>
 
The Cape May Lighthouse, situated at the tip of the peninsula within the state park, serves as a landmark orientation point for birdwatchers and, some researchers believe, for migrating birds themselves. Its surrounding grounds and the adjacent pond consistently produce rare sightings during fall migration. The lighthouse's elevated observation area offers a sweeping view of the Atlantic and the bay, making it useful for watching seabird movement as well.
 
== Notable Species ==
 
Cape May's species list is broad enough to cover nearly every ecological guild present in eastern North America. Still, certain species define the Cape May experience for visiting birders and carry particular conservation significance.
 
The rufa red knot is arguably the most emblematic. This long-distance shorebird migrates between the Tierra del Fuego region of South America and its Arctic breeding grounds, a round trip of roughly 18,000 miles. The Delaware Bay stopover is the linchpin of that journey. The subspecies was listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act in December 2014 following decades of population decline linked to horseshoe crab overharvest and habitat degradation.<ref>[https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2014/12/11/2014-28338/endangered-and-threatened-wildlife-and-plants-threatened-species-status-for-the-rufa-red-knot "Threatened Species Status for the Rufa Red Knot"], ''Federal Register'', December 11, 2014.</ref> The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service published a recovery outline for the subspecies in 2019, identifying key actions needed to stabilize and increase the population, including continued regulation of horseshoe crab harvest, protection of wintering habitat in South America, and monitoring of breeding success in the Arctic.<ref>[https://www.fws.gov/sites/default/files/documents/Recovery-Outline-rufa-Red-Knot.pdf "Rufa Red Knot Recovery Outline"], ''U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service'', 2019.</ref> Population monitoring continues at Cape May as part of coordinated flyway-wide research efforts.
 
Raptors are a major draw from late August through November. The Hawk Watch platform at Cape May Point State Park records sharp-shinned hawks, Cooper's hawks, merlins, peregrine falcons, osprey, northern harriers, and American kestrels in numbers that can reach thousands on peak flight days. Broad-winged hawks pass in concentrated waves in mid-September. The CMBO publishes annual count totals that researchers and land managers use to track population trends across the eastern raptor community.
 
Waterfowl staging on the bay and ocean includes scoters, long-tailed ducks, common eiders, and a variety of diving ducks during fall and winter. The salt marshes support large numbers of herons, egrets, and glossy ibis during the warmer months. Neotropical warblers, vireos, flycatchers, and thrushes pass through in impressive numbers during both migration periods, with South Cape May Meadows and Higbee Beach Wildlife Management Area consistently producing high counts and rare sightings. The piping plover nests on Cape May beaches and is monitored closely by state wildlife managers as part of Endangered Species Act compliance for the threatened species. American woodcock move through in significant numbers during migration, though this population faces periodic weather-related mortality events: a post-storm die-off of woodcock was documented at Cape May in early 2026 following a severe weather system that grounded migrants along the coast.<ref>[https://valleyforgeaudubon.org/2026/02/05/post-storm-die-off-of-american-woodcock-in-cape-may/ "Post-Storm Die-Off of American Woodcock in Cape May"], ''Valley Forge Audubon Society'', February 5, 2026.</ref>
 
== Hawk Watch ==
 
The Cape May Point Hawk Watch is one of the most intensively monitored raptor observation sites in North America. Counts have been conducted systematically at the platform within Cape May Point State Park since the CMBO's founding in 1976, producing a continuous dataset spanning nearly five decades. The counts document daily and seasonal passage totals for all raptor species observed, with trained observers staffing the platform from late August through November each year. Annual totals for individual species such as sharp-shinned hawk, American kestrel, and osprey serve as population indices used by researchers to assess long-term trends across the eastern flyway.
 
Peak counts at the platform can be striking. Single-day totals of sharp-shinned hawks have exceeded 10,000 birds during optimal flight conditions, which typically combine northwest winds following a cold front passage with clear skies in the hours after dawn. Broad-winged hawks, which migrate in tight flocks called kettles, produce some of the most visually dramatic passages in mid-September. Peregrine falcons, whose populations collapsed due to DDT contamination in the mid-twentieth century and recovered following the pesticide's banning and active reintroduction programs, are now regularly counted in the hundreds on good flight days at Cape May, an outcome that the hawk watch data helped document and confirm.
 
The hawk watch methodology is described in CMBO's annual reports and has been influential in shaping raptor monitoring protocols at other sites across the continent. Pete Dunne served for many years as the naturalist and public face of the watch, and his writing helped give the site a national profile it retains today.<ref>Dunne, P., Sibley, D., and Sutton, C. (1988). ''Hawks in Flight''. Houghton Mifflin. (2nd ed. 2012.)</ref> The platform itself is free and open to the public during count season, and on peak days it functions as an informal gathering place where observers share sightings, discuss identification, and contribute their own tallies to the count effort.
 
== Birding Seasons and Peak Times ==
 
Cape May offers productive birding throughout the year, but two periods dominate. Fall migration, running roughly from late August through November, is the peak season. It's when the hawk watch is active, when the concentration effect of the peninsula geography is most dramatic, and when the diversity of species passing through is at its highest. September brings the first major flights of raptors and shorebirds. October is the peak month for hawk watching and for songbird fallouts, particularly after cold fronts with northwest winds. November extends into waterfowl and late raptor season.
 
Spring migration, from late April through early June, is less dramatic in terms of raw numbers but offers its own rewards. The Delaware Bay shorebird spectacle, timed to the horseshoe crab spawn, peaks in late May and draws some of the highest single-day shorebird counts anywhere in North America. Warblers, tanagers, and other neotropical migrants move through in colorful numbers during May. Spring migration tends to be faster-moving than fall, so timing a visit to coincide with peak weeks matters considerably.
 
Winter at Cape May is quieter but not without interest. Waterfowl concentrations on the bay and nearshore ocean can be substantial. Short-eared owls and rough-legged hawks appear in open habitats. The Christmas Bird Count, organized annually in the
 
== References ==
<references />

Latest revision as of 11:34, 12 May 2026

Cape May, located at the southern tip of New Jersey, is recognized as one of the most significant birding hotspots in the United States. The town sits at the confluence of the Atlantic Ocean and the Delaware Bay, a position that gives it disproportionately significant ecological importance for migratory birds traveling along the Atlantic Flyway. Its peninsula geography, characterized by salt marshes, coastal dunes, freshwater impoundments, and maritime shrubland, creates a concentration effect: birds funneling south along the Eastern Seaboard reach the tip of the peninsula and pause, sometimes in enormous numbers, before crossing the bay or the ocean. More than 400 species have been documented in the Cape May region, according to records maintained by the Cape May Bird Observatory (CMBO) and the Cornell Lab of Ornithology's eBird platform.[1] That total draws ornithologists, casual birdwatchers, and conservationists from across North America and beyond.

The seasonal influx of migratory birds, particularly during spring and fall, brings thousands of visitors each year. Every autumn, hundreds of thousands of birds move through the skies above Cape May, including raptors, shorebirds, waterfowl, and songbirds.[2] This annual spectacle contributes substantially to the town's economy and ecological profile alike. Conservation efforts, led by organizations including the New Jersey Audubon Society and supported by state and federal agencies, have focused on protecting the habitats that make these migrations possible. The continued presence of species such as the rufa red knot, listed as threatened under the U.S. Endangered Species Act in December 2014,[3] and the piping plover reflects the measurable impact of those efforts. Cape May has been designated a Globally Important Bird Area by BirdLife International and the National Audubon Society, a formal recognition that places it among a select group of sites considered critical to the long-term survival of bird populations at continental and global scales.[4]

Cape May's birding opportunities are anchored by Cape May Point State Park and the adjacent Delaware Bay shoreline, which together form a critical ecosystem for shorebirds, waterfowl, and raptors. The Cape May Bird Observatory, established in 1976, serves as the primary scientific and educational institution responsible for systematic hawk counts, banding operations, and public programming. Its hawk watch data, collected over decades, rank among the most cited raptor monitoring datasets in North America.

History

Cape May's history as a birding destination is rooted in its long ecological significance. The area was first inhabited by the Lenni Lenape people, who recognized the richness of its coastal and estuarine resources long before European settlement. European colonists began arriving in the seventeenth century, drawn by the same productive waters and sheltered shoreline. It wasn't until the nineteenth century, however, that Cape May began attracting explicit attention for its birdlife.

During the 1800s, Cape May emerged as a popular summer resort for wealthy visitors from Philadelphia and New York, drawn by the ocean air and scenic coastline. The influx of educated travelers also brought early naturalists, who began documenting the region's remarkable diversity of migratory birds. By the latter decades of the century, ornithologists were treating Cape May as a focal point for field study, contributing observations that helped establish the foundational understanding of Atlantic Flyway migration patterns. The most comprehensive early synthesis of this work came from ornithologist Witmer Stone, whose two-volume Bird Studies at Old Cape May, published in 1937 by the Delaware Valley Ornithological Club, remains a foundational reference for anyone studying the region's avifauna. Stone documented species accounts, seasonal patterns, and historical changes in bird populations with a rigor that set the standard for subsequent ornithological work in the region.[5]

The shift toward formal conservation accelerated in the twentieth century. Cape May Point State Park was established in 1961, providing legal protection for the fragile habitats that support the peninsula's birdlife. The park's creation reflected a broader national movement to preserve ecologically significant natural areas and came amid growing scientific awareness that migratory stopovers were as critical to bird survival as breeding and wintering grounds.

In 1976, the New Jersey Audubon Society founded the Cape May Bird Observatory. The CMBO's establishment marked a turning point in how Cape May's birdlife was studied and communicated to the public. The observatory began systematic hawk counts at the Cape May Point Hawk Watch platform, generating long-term population data for dozens of raptor species, including the sharp-shinned hawk, Cooper's hawk, merlin, and peregrine falcon. Those counts have continued annually and now constitute one of the longest unbroken raptor monitoring records in North America. Pete Dunne, a prominent ornithologist and author based at Cape May, helped bring the hawk watch and the broader birding culture of Cape May to national attention through his writing and advocacy during the 1980s and 1990s.[6]

The late twentieth century also saw significant habitat restoration work. The Nature Conservancy undertook restoration of the South Cape May Meadows, converting former agricultural land and degraded coastal habitat into a managed freshwater and wetland complex that now serves as one of the most productive birding sites on the entire peninsula.[7] The project stands as a concrete example of how targeted land management can reverse habitat loss and directly benefit migratory bird populations. By the early 2000s, Cape May's institutional infrastructure for birding, including the CMBO, state park programming, and a network of land conservation organizations, had made it one of the most scientifically monitored birding locations in the country.

The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection has collaborated with local organizations over the decades to monitor bird populations and address threats ranging from coastal development to water quality degradation in the Delaware Bay. These partnerships have ensured that Cape May's ecological significance remains backed by ongoing data collection and regulatory protection. Not without controversy, the management of horseshoe crab harvesting in the Delaware Bay, which is directly tied to shorebird survival, has required sustained negotiation between commercial fishing interests, state regulators, and conservation groups across multiple jurisdictions.

Geography

Cape May's geography is the defining reason for its status as a birding hotspot. The peninsula sits at the southernmost point of New Jersey, where the Delaware Bay meets the Atlantic Ocean. This position creates a natural funnel: birds moving south along the coast or across the bay concentrate at the tip of the peninsula, particularly during fall migration, when northwest winds push migrants offshore and then into the Cape May corridor.

The peninsula's habitats are diverse and ecologically distinct. Salt marshes line the bay shore, providing feeding and roosting habitat for wading birds, shorebirds, and waterfowl. The barrier beach along the Atlantic side supports nesting shorebirds, including the threatened piping plover, and offers foraging habitat for terns and skimmers. Freshwater impoundments, particularly at South Cape May Meadows and within Cape May Point State Park, attract a wide range of species that would otherwise bypass an entirely coastal environment. Maritime shrubland, dominated by bayberry, wax myrtle, and hawthorn, provides critical stopover habitat for neotropical songbirds during both spring and fall migrations. Pine barrens extend northward from the peninsula and contribute additional habitat complexity.

The intertidal zones of the Delaware Bay are ecologically critical in their own right. Each spring, shortly before and after full moons in May and June, horseshoe crabs come ashore in massive numbers to spawn along the bay's sandy beaches. The eggs they deposit are a concentrated, high-lipid food source, and the rufa red knot depends on this resource almost entirely to refuel for the final leg of its migration from South America to the Arctic. The relationship is precise and unforgiving: red knots arrive at Delaware Bay after a non-stop flight of several thousand miles from their wintering grounds in southern South America, with fat reserves nearly depleted, and must roughly double their body weight within two weeks to fuel the remaining journey to Arctic breeding grounds. Thousands of red knots, along with ruddy turnstones, sanderlings, and semipalmated sandpipers, converge on the Delaware Bay beaches annually to exploit this food pulse. Without sufficient horseshoe crab eggs, red knot survival rates decline sharply, a relationship documented in studies by Lawrence Niles and colleagues.[8] The broader ecology of this system, including the cascading effects of horseshoe crab population changes on multiple shorebird species, is examined in detail by Burger and colleagues.[9]

The Cape May Lighthouse, situated at the tip of the peninsula within the state park, serves as a landmark orientation point for birdwatchers and, some researchers believe, for migrating birds themselves. Its surrounding grounds and the adjacent pond consistently produce rare sightings during fall migration. The lighthouse's elevated observation area offers a sweeping view of the Atlantic and the bay, making it useful for watching seabird movement as well.

Notable Species

Cape May's species list is broad enough to cover nearly every ecological guild present in eastern North America. Still, certain species define the Cape May experience for visiting birders and carry particular conservation significance.

The rufa red knot is arguably the most emblematic. This long-distance shorebird migrates between the Tierra del Fuego region of South America and its Arctic breeding grounds, a round trip of roughly 18,000 miles. The Delaware Bay stopover is the linchpin of that journey. The subspecies was listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act in December 2014 following decades of population decline linked to horseshoe crab overharvest and habitat degradation.[10] The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service published a recovery outline for the subspecies in 2019, identifying key actions needed to stabilize and increase the population, including continued regulation of horseshoe crab harvest, protection of wintering habitat in South America, and monitoring of breeding success in the Arctic.[11] Population monitoring continues at Cape May as part of coordinated flyway-wide research efforts.

Raptors are a major draw from late August through November. The Hawk Watch platform at Cape May Point State Park records sharp-shinned hawks, Cooper's hawks, merlins, peregrine falcons, osprey, northern harriers, and American kestrels in numbers that can reach thousands on peak flight days. Broad-winged hawks pass in concentrated waves in mid-September. The CMBO publishes annual count totals that researchers and land managers use to track population trends across the eastern raptor community.

Waterfowl staging on the bay and ocean includes scoters, long-tailed ducks, common eiders, and a variety of diving ducks during fall and winter. The salt marshes support large numbers of herons, egrets, and glossy ibis during the warmer months. Neotropical warblers, vireos, flycatchers, and thrushes pass through in impressive numbers during both migration periods, with South Cape May Meadows and Higbee Beach Wildlife Management Area consistently producing high counts and rare sightings. The piping plover nests on Cape May beaches and is monitored closely by state wildlife managers as part of Endangered Species Act compliance for the threatened species. American woodcock move through in significant numbers during migration, though this population faces periodic weather-related mortality events: a post-storm die-off of woodcock was documented at Cape May in early 2026 following a severe weather system that grounded migrants along the coast.[12]

Hawk Watch

The Cape May Point Hawk Watch is one of the most intensively monitored raptor observation sites in North America. Counts have been conducted systematically at the platform within Cape May Point State Park since the CMBO's founding in 1976, producing a continuous dataset spanning nearly five decades. The counts document daily and seasonal passage totals for all raptor species observed, with trained observers staffing the platform from late August through November each year. Annual totals for individual species such as sharp-shinned hawk, American kestrel, and osprey serve as population indices used by researchers to assess long-term trends across the eastern flyway.

Peak counts at the platform can be striking. Single-day totals of sharp-shinned hawks have exceeded 10,000 birds during optimal flight conditions, which typically combine northwest winds following a cold front passage with clear skies in the hours after dawn. Broad-winged hawks, which migrate in tight flocks called kettles, produce some of the most visually dramatic passages in mid-September. Peregrine falcons, whose populations collapsed due to DDT contamination in the mid-twentieth century and recovered following the pesticide's banning and active reintroduction programs, are now regularly counted in the hundreds on good flight days at Cape May, an outcome that the hawk watch data helped document and confirm.

The hawk watch methodology is described in CMBO's annual reports and has been influential in shaping raptor monitoring protocols at other sites across the continent. Pete Dunne served for many years as the naturalist and public face of the watch, and his writing helped give the site a national profile it retains today.[13] The platform itself is free and open to the public during count season, and on peak days it functions as an informal gathering place where observers share sightings, discuss identification, and contribute their own tallies to the count effort.

Birding Seasons and Peak Times

Cape May offers productive birding throughout the year, but two periods dominate. Fall migration, running roughly from late August through November, is the peak season. It's when the hawk watch is active, when the concentration effect of the peninsula geography is most dramatic, and when the diversity of species passing through is at its highest. September brings the first major flights of raptors and shorebirds. October is the peak month for hawk watching and for songbird fallouts, particularly after cold fronts with northwest winds. November extends into waterfowl and late raptor season.

Spring migration, from late April through early June, is less dramatic in terms of raw numbers but offers its own rewards. The Delaware Bay shorebird spectacle, timed to the horseshoe crab spawn, peaks in late May and draws some of the highest single-day shorebird counts anywhere in North America. Warblers, tanagers, and other neotropical migrants move through in colorful numbers during May. Spring migration tends to be faster-moving than fall, so timing a visit to coincide with peak weeks matters considerably.

Winter at Cape May is quieter but not without interest. Waterfowl concentrations on the bay and nearshore ocean can be substantial. Short-eared owls and rough-legged hawks appear in open habitats. The Christmas Bird Count, organized annually in the

References

  1. "Cape Island--South Cape May Meadows", eBird, Cornell Lab of Ornithology.
  2. "Every fall, hundreds of thousands of birds soar through the skies above New Jersey", Science, American Association for the Advancement of Science.
  3. "Threatened Species Status for the Rufa Red Knot", Federal Register, Vol. 79, No. 237, December 11, 2014.
  4. "Cape May Peninsula Important Bird Area", National Audubon Society.
  5. Stone, Witmer. Bird Studies at Old Cape May: An Ornithology of Coastal New Jersey. Delaware Valley Ornithological Club, 1937.
  6. Dunne, P., Sibley, D., and Sutton, C. (1988). Hawks in Flight. Houghton Mifflin. (2nd ed. 2012.)
  7. "Cape Island--South Cape May Meadows", eBird, Cornell Lab of Ornithology.
  8. Niles, L.J. et al. (2008). "Effects of Horseshoe Crab Harvest in Delaware Bay on Red Knots: Are Harvest Limits Sustainable?" BioScience 58(2): 153-160.
  9. Burger, Joanna, et al. Horseshoe Crabs and Shorebirds: The Story of a Food Web. Stackpole Books, 2004.
  10. "Threatened Species Status for the Rufa Red Knot", Federal Register, December 11, 2014.
  11. "Rufa Red Knot Recovery Outline", U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 2019.
  12. "Post-Storm Die-Off of American Woodcock in Cape May", Valley Forge Audubon Society, February 5, 2026.
  13. Dunne, P., Sibley, D., and Sutton, C. (1988). Hawks in Flight. Houghton Mifflin. (2nd ed. 2012.)