WildView™
An Eye on Wildlife
Wildlife Conservation Society Menusearch for stories
- Browse Categories
- Art and Nature
- Assignments
- Bronx Zoo
- Crustaceans
- Education
- Guanaco
- Herping from Home
- Horticulture
- New York Aquarium
- People
- Technology
- Throwback Thursday
- WCS 125th Anniversary
- WCS Chronicles
- Wild Places
- Wildlife
- Amphibians
- Antelope
- Bats
- Bears
- Big Cats
- Birds
- Birds of Prey
- Bison
- Bovine
- Buffalo
- Canids, Dogs, Wolves
- Caribou
- Carnivores
- Cats
- Deer
- Dolphins
- Elephants
- Elk
- Endangered
- Fish
- Fox
- Giraffe
- Giraffes
- Great Apes
- Have No Fear
- Hippos
- Horses
- Insects
- Invertebrates
- Lemurs
- Mammals
- Marsupials
- Mice and Rats
- Mongoose
- Monkeys
- Moose
- Muskoxen
- Ocean Giants
- Okapi
- Otters
- Pangolins
- Pigs
- Primates
- Rabbits, Hares, Pikas
- Red Pandas
- Reptiles
- Rhinos
- Rodents
- Seals and Sea Lions
- Sharks
- Sheep and Goats
- Tapir
- Walruses
- Wildlife
- Zebra
- Wildlife Health
subscribe

Stephen Sautner
Wildlife Conservation Society
Stephen Sautner is the communications director for the Wildlife Conservation Society. He can sometimes be seen looking for birds along the Bronx Zoo’s Mistubishi River Walk, which he says is an overlooked hotspot for migratory songbirds.