News

Latest News and Updates from Audubon in California

California Condor. Photo: Scott Frier/USFWS

Northern Pintail is one of the nominees for 2015 Bird of the Year. Voting continues through Dec 20 for Audubon California's 2015 Bird of the Year. Vote as many times as you like until then. There are seven nominees, but you're welcome to write in your own candidate.

Who says an election can't be warm and fuzzy? Vote for Audubon California's 2015 Bird of the Year through Dec. 20. Vote as many times as you like. Pick one of the nominated birds, or write-in your own candidate.

Tricolored Blackbird designated a candidate for state endangered species listing
Press Center

Tricolored Blackbird designated candidate for state endangered species listing

— Responding to an alarming drop in the rare bird’s numbers, the California Fish and Game Commission today advanced the consideration of the Tricolored Blackbird as candidate for protection under the California Endangered Species Act.
California Fish and Game Commission should grant state endangered species listing to Tricolored Blackbird
Tricolored Blackbird

California Fish and Game Commission should grant state endangered species listing to Tricolored Blackbird

Audubon California supports decision to protect rare bird, which has declined 44 percent since 2011

The American Kestrel is one of the nominees for 2015 Bird of the Year. Vote for any of the seven nominees, or write in your own choice, through Dec. 20. You can vote as many times as you like. Cast your vote now.

LA Times editorial: Push to include drought legislation in spending bill is a mistake

The Los Angeles Times editorial board today comes out strong against a push by House leaders to include "drought response" language in the omnibus spending bill. This language is much less about addressing the problems of the drought than is about dismantling environmental protections, diverting water from the Central Valley wildlife refuges, and halting the restoration of the San Joaquin River. We're asking people to send an email to their leaders opposing this horrible plan.

Now's the time to vote for 2015 Bird of the Year. The American Avocet is one of seven birds nominated for 2015 Bird of the Year. But if you've got a favorite, feel free to write in your own choice. You can vote as many times as you like through Dec. 20.

Construction ends on Sonoma Creek enhancement project
Audublog

Construction ends on Sonoma Creek enhancement project

Our gang takes a quick tour of the enhancement project at Sonoma Creek on the last day of work

Birds have been stealing our food for centuries, new research says

Photo: Pat Reynolds

Don't get mad the next time a gull tries to steal your french fry, they're just following tradition. Paul Haemig, a Swedish animal ecologist visited 80 cafes and restaurants and recorded bird behavior. From a New Scientist article:

Haemig thinks that foraging where humans are present is a behaviour that evolved several times. And he believes that, in the principal clade to which these birds belong, the behaviour evolved earlier than humans did – because the species in this clade separated genetically before humans emerged.

“Their ancestors hung out around our ancestors,” he says. “It looks suspiciously like a very old association.”

He points to nearly 60 known foraging relationships between birds and other creatures, from army ants to aardvarks and whales to warthogs. So just as, on a frosty morning, a robin swoops for worms turned over by a gardener’s fork or, in the Congo marshes, birds pick up frogs flushed out by gorillas, the savvy birds of urbanised areas are foraging for mozzarella panini and chips at your table...

Restaurants may even have a role in conservation, Haemig says. In rural restaurants, the three predominant species he saw were declining in numbers in the countryside: house sparrows, white wagtails and Eurasian tree sparrows. This suggests that rural restaurants could become part of the plan for conserving them.

Read the entire piece here.

Drought isn't an excuse to threaten wildlife

Great opinion piece in today's Sacramento Bee from our colleagues at Defenders of Wildlife arguing that the drought should not be used as an opportunity to gut environmental protections.

"Other legislators, however, have tried to capitalize on the drought to grab more water for agribusinesses in the Central Valley, while undermining bedrock environmental laws. Rep. David Valadao’s Western Water and American Food Security Act is a prime example.

The bill from Valadao, R-Hanford, would override Endangered Species Act protections for imperiled native salmon runs, increasing the risk of extinctions among fish species that have suffered through four dry years. It could also cut back water to wildlife refuges so that some might receive barely a trickle and others nothing at all, even during times of critical need."

How you can help, right now