Latest News and Updates from Audubon in California
California Condor. Photo: Scott Frier/USFWS
Tricolored Blackbirds in Fresno County. Audubon California's Samantha Arthurs is out looking for nesting flocks of Tricolored Blackbirds today, and she spotted this flock in Fresno County. Nesting season starts soon, and we're going to be out there again trying to protect this struggling species.
New study shows massive wetland habitat loss in California's Sacramento Valley.
Great article in the Mercury News about the rebound of Bald Eagles in the San Francisco Bay Area.
In an opinion piece in the Desert Sun, Audubon California's Frank Ruiz notes that issues of public health and bird habitat at the Salton Sea are linked:
When people argue that we must choose between habitat for birds at the Salton Sea and efforts to control dust, I am reminded of my father and his coworkers, and their small bird in the cage (in the mines). At the Salton Sea, when we ensure that birds survive, we will also ensure that people can thrive as well.
Golden Gate Audubon just installed a live web cam to follow an Osprey family nesting in Richmond. Richmond and Rosie are nesting at the Whirley crane near the Rosie the Riveter/World War II Home Front National Historical Park. Check out the camera and this great article in the East Bay Times to learn more about this exciting project.
Audubon President David Yarnold today was quick to condemn President Donald Trump's executive order reversing a number of federal policiy addressing climate change, most notably the Clean Power Plan:
Said Yarnold, “There are numerous paths to reach a clean energy future, but none-of-the-above isn't one of them. The administration is taking off the table our most concrete plans to deal with climate change—but without a single alternative."
Here in California, officials moved quickly to make it clear that they would fight the administration's attempts to back away from this country's progress on climate change. California has aligned with several other states to threaten court action over the administration's moves.
Despite its many conservation challenges, the Salton Sea remains a terrific place to view birds. More then 400 species can be spotted there, including a number of rarities. Check out the map below, then get out there. To download the map in English, click here. For a Spanish version of the map, click here.
Audubon California's Anna Weinstein talks about the importance of protecting pacific herring, which is a major source of food for birds.
Just want to draw attention to this terrific article from our friends at the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service about the need to protect nesting birds such as the Western Snowy Plover.
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California is a global biodiversity hotspots, with one of the greatest concentrations of living species on Earth.