MO Missouri Porch

Birding & Wildlife Watching

Quick reference

The spots, the seasons, the gear, and the ethics on one page. Skim the cards below, then use the place graph to match a spot to your group and the day. Missouri's crossroads of habitats means an enormous cast — but a little planning is most of the work.

The one idea

The wild doesn't perform on cue — but it gathers on a schedule. You can't make an animal appear, but you can show up where they gather, when they gather, slow down, and learn to look.

Missouri hosts more than 400 kinds of birds, plus deer, elk, otters, and more. Watching wildlife on purpose? You're in the right place. For what to do when you run into an animal, see the Wildlife hub.

Where to watch

Where the wildlife gathers

Status-check every site below

Check before you drive: building hours, trail status, auto-tour status, hunting closures, flooding, and special-event registration can all change — and a nature center's building often keeps different hours than its trails.

What the access styles mean
  • Nature center: Free and family-friendly, with restrooms, exhibits, programs, and easy trails — the best beginner start.
  • Auto-tour refuge: Watch from your car on a slow, often one-way loop — great in cold weather or for limited mobility, and a natural photo blind.
  • Boardwalk / blind: See wetland birds up close without disturbing them, from a boardwalk or a blind.
  • Prairie trail: Grassland birds and wildflowers on foot — bison viewed from a distance, behind fences.
  • Urban migration park: A short spring or fall morning close to the city, when migrants pour through.
  • Backcountry: Forest and big-area watching for more experienced birders — bring a map.

Free & easy: MDC nature centers

Runge Nature Center

Jefferson City

Exhibits, trails, and naturalist programs — a gentle first stop.

Nature center

Powder Valley Nature Center

Kirkwood (St. Louis)

112 acres, a 3,000-gallon aquarium, and easy trails (no pets).

Nature center

Anita B. Gorman Discovery Center

Kansas City

An urban nature center with exhibits and programs.

Nature center

Burr Oak Woods

Blue Springs

The first MDC nature center (1982), with 1,000+ acres of trails.

Nature center

Springfield & Cape Girardeau Conservation Nature Centers

Springfield / Cape Girardeau

Trails and exhibits on the edge of each city; Cape's run along the Mississippi.

Nature center

Rockwoods Reservation

Wildwood (St. Louis)

Forest trails and a visitor center west of St. Louis.

Nature center

The spectacles: National Wildlife Refuges

Loess Bluffs NWR

near Mound City (far NW)

THE headliner — a one-way 10-mile auto tour, 310 bird species, and snow geese that can reach seven figures at peak (they move with the weather, so check the weekly survey). A Globally Important Bird Area; free Eagle Days the first full weekend of December.

Auto-tour refuge

Mingo NWR

near Puxico (Bootheel)

Cypress-tupelo swamp with three wildlife drives and the accessible 0.8-mile Swampwalk boardwalk (the Ozark Highlands route is seasonal).

Boardwalk / blind

Swan Lake NWR

near Sumner (north-central)

Great spring waterfowl and shorebirds — but the interior closes from late October until the first Saturday in March (the nature trail and main-entrance views stay open).

Auto-tour refuge

Clarence Cannon NWR

near Annada (NE, on the Mississippi)

River-bottom wetlands and migrating waterfowl.

Auto-tour refuge

Big Muddy NWR

along the Missouri River (17 units)

Seventeen river units; access and facilities vary unit by unit. (Missouri has eight national wildlife refuges in all — these four-plus are the best for birding, but access differs sharply.)

Backcountry

Wetland workhorses: MDC conservation areas

Eagle Bluffs CA

near Columbia

One of the highest bird counts in the state (~284 species); shorebirds peak in May and August.

Boardwalk / blind

Otter Slough & Schell-Osage CAs

Dexter / Nevada

Strong waterfowl and wading birds; Schell-Osage is good for eagles.

Boardwalk / blind

Other managed wetlands

Ted Shanks, Grand Pass, Fountain Grove, Four Rivers, Duck Creek

More managed wetlands across the state — but parts close during waterfowl season (roughly mid-October to mid-February), so check the area page.

Boardwalk / blind

Near the metros

Audubon Center at Riverlands

West Alton (~18 mi N of the Gateway Arch)

A ~3,700-acre migratory-bird sanctuary where the Missouri and Mississippi meet — 300+ species, winter eagles and trumpeter swans, and a free center (normally Tue–Sun).

Urban migration park

Tower Grove Park

St. Louis

200+ species — the best urban 'see migration tomorrow morning' spot in spring and fall.

Urban migration park

The vanishing prairie: tallgrass grasslands

Dunn Ranch Prairie (TNC)

near Eagleville (NW)

A bison herd and 100+ kinds of birds; stay on the designated trails (the bison pastures are closed). It protects one of the last prairie-chicken populations — but sightings are never guaranteed.

Prairie trail

Taberville & Wah'Kon-Tah Prairies

west-central Missouri

Large remnant prairies with grassland birds and wildflowers.

Prairie trail

Prairie State Park

near Liberal (SW)

Missouri's largest remaining tallgrass prairie, with a bison herd.

Prairie trail

Ozark forest & glades: the south

Peck Ranch CA

Carter / Shannon counties

Missouri's restored elk — see and hear them bugle in September and October.

Backcountry

The southwest glades

SW Missouri

Sunny glades hold the 'crossroads' rarities — roadrunner and painted bunting are possible but genuinely rare; check recent eBird and treat any sighting as a bonus.

Backcountry

Mark Twain National Forest

across the Ozarks

Vast forest open for watching — woodpeckers, warblers, and hawks. (See the Camping hub for getting out into it.)

Backcountry

Find more with the Great Missouri Birding Trail, which maps birding sites statewide, and eBird, which shows the busy hotspots near you with recent sightings. Wherever you go: stay on roads, trails, and boardwalks; respect closed areas; and get permission on private land.

Cheat sheet

Everything in one skim

One card per topic. Each page in this hub goes deeper — these are the load-bearing one-liners.

The whole idea

  • Go where wildlife gathers, go at the right time, slow down, and learn to look quietly.
  • You can't make an animal appear — but you can show up where they gather, when they gather.

Easiest start

  • A free MDC nature center — restrooms, exhibits, easy trails, and friendly programs.
  • Or just watch a backyard feeder. Both are free and a great place to learn the common birds first.

The spectacles

  • Snow geese + bald eagles at Loess Bluffs NWR — peak numbers move with the weather, so check the weekly survey.
  • Eagle Days events make winter eagles easy (some require registration).
  • Prairie-chickens: fewer than 25 remain — sightings are never guaranteed, and you must never approach a lek.

Top spots by type

  • National wildlife refuges: Missouri has eight in all; the four flagship ones are the best for birding, but access differs sharply — status-check every one.
  • Wetland conservation areas (Eagle Bluffs, Otter Slough, Schell-Osage) for ducks, geese, and waders.
  • Tallgrass prairies (Dunn Ranch, Prairie State Park) for grassland birds and bison behind fences.
  • Peck Ranch CA for Missouri's restored elk — see and hear them bugle in September and October.

Best timing

  • May for warblers (if you go out once a year, go in May).
  • Fall snow geese usually peak mid-to-late November; eagles best December–February.
  • Spring snow geese head north around mid-March.
  • Dawn and dusk daily — most birds and mammals are busiest then.

Gear ladder

  • Binoculars first — 8x42 or 10x42 is the sweet spot, and the one real purchase.
  • Then a field guide or the Merlin app to help with IDs.
  • A spotting scope can come later — handy for distant geese, eagles, and shorebirds.

Free apps

  • Merlin Bird ID — offers suggestions, not proof; compare and confirm before you report a rare bird.
  • eBird — recent sightings, hotspots, and your life list.
  • iNaturalist — covers all wildlife, not just birds.
  • MDC's free online Field Guide — IDs any Missouri animal, with photos, sounds, and range maps.

Backyard

  • Black-oil sunflower + suet + a shallow, clean birdbath draws the most birds.
  • Plant milkweed for monarchs and native plants for everything else.
  • Keep cats indoors — the single biggest thing you can do for backyard birds.
  • Window strikes: dense patterns on the OUTSIDE, spaced about 2 inches apart — one decal does NOT work.

Ethics

  • Put the animal first — if it changes its behavior because of you, you're too close.
  • Never chase or flush an animal, and leave babies alone (a fawn or fledgling is being watched by a parent).
  • Use little or no playback — beginners should just skip it.
  • Stay on roads, trails, and boardwalks, and don't publish sensitive species, nest, or lek locations.

Safety

  • Ticks, snakes, and poison ivy come with being outside — it's all covered in the Wildlife hub.
  • Wear blaze orange on shared public hunting land in fall and winter.
  • Look, don't touch — never handle wildlife.
  • Drive refuge auto-tour roads slow, and watch for deer (don't swerve).

Help out

  • Add your sightings to eBird, or join a bird count (the Great Backyard Bird Count or Christmas Bird Count).
  • Plant native and skip pesticides; don't feed wildlife (clean backyard bird feeding is the one exception).
  • Protect the night — bright lights disorient migrating birds and dim the fireflies.

Look, don't collect

Missouri's native wildlife is generally protected. Don't catch, handle, collect, keep, disturb, or remove wildlife, nests, eggs, feathers, or other parts unless a current law or permit specifically allows it. Legal hunting, fishing, scientific collection, and rehabilitation have their own rules — and migratory birds, with their active nests, eggs, and parts, are federally protected.

State bird

Missouri's state bird is the eastern bluebird (since 1927) — not the cardinal. The bright-red northern cardinal is the familiar year-round feeder bird, but the bluebird is the official one.

What's moving right now?

What's moving right now? Use BirdCast during spring and fall migration for live migration forecasts, eBird for recent hotspot sightings and seasonal bar charts, and the Loess Bluffs weekly survey for current goose and eagle counts.

See also

Wildlife · Hiking · Dark Skies · Hunting · Camping · Rivers

Before you go

Missouri Porch explains; the season and the wildlife decide.

Last checked: 2026-06-18. Check the managing area or refuge for current hours, closures, and rules before you go — and check eBird for what's being seen right now.

Page feedback

See something off, missing, or unclear?

Send a quick note if a Missouri source, county office, local detail, or link needs a closer look.

Send a note