People

Tice Supplee

Director of Bird Conservation, Audubon Southwest

Tice has been the Audubon Southwest Director of Bird Conservation since 2005, after a career with the Arizona Game and Fish Department that included experiences in research, habitat management, game management, and urban wildlife. She coordinates Audubon Southwest’s science related activities with National Audubon Society programs and offices in other states and co-manages the Arizona Important Bird Areas program.  

Her National Audubon Society work is focused on birds and their habitats. In addition, she teaches Environmental Biology at Phoenix College. Her work at Audubon includes administration of the Arizona Important Bird Areas program. Sites that are critical to a complete life cycle for resident and migratory birds are given this status. Her 2008 National Audubon Society Fellowship conservation project was development of a partnership with Mesa Community College Geospatial Technologies program to create a real world geospatial analysis using data related to the Important Bird Areas program.

Tice earned her B.S. at Cornell University and M.S. at the University of Arizona, both in Wildlife Ecology. She has received awards from the Arizona chapter of The Wildlife Society, Arizona Wildlife Federation, and National Audubon Society.

Articles by Tice Supplee

Audubon Southwest Awarded Prestigious WaterSMART Grant to Restore the Lower Gila River
July 11, 2024 — In partnership with the Lower Gila River Collaborative, funds will advance restoration work along the Lower Gila River west of Phoenix to benefit birds and people.
Climate Change Threatens Arizona’s Forest Birds
October 22, 2019 — New Audubon report shows about half of Arizona’s birds are vulnerable.
In the Field—Western Rivers Bird Count
June 12, 2019 — A dispatch from Arizona’s Salt River.