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Latest News and Updates from Audubon in California

California Condor. Photo: Scott Frier/USFWS

San Joaquin River declared America's second most endangered

The San Joaquin River flowing just outside of Fresno. Photo: Garrison Frost

American Rivers this week declared California's San Joaquin River the second most endangered river in the United States“Dams, levees and excessive water diversions have hurt river habitat and opportunities for recreation and community access,” the report says. “The river’s salmon and steelhead populations are on the brink of extinction.” Audubon California has advocated for the restoration of the San Joaquin River for some time -- more about that on our website.

CDFW wants comment on the Tricolored Blackbirds listing and Stanislaus Audubon Society responds accordingly
Audublog

CDFW wants comment on the Tricolored Blackbirds listing and Stanislaus Audubon Society responds accordingly

CDFW is currently requesting public comment on a proposal to list the Tricolored Blackbird as a threatened or endangered species. This is your opportunity, as a concerned community member, bird nerd, or environmentalist to speak up for the species!

Exceptional and extreme drought persists in California

According to the U.S. Drought Monitor, California continues to experience drought. The consorsium of government agencies says that only a small part of the state -- 3.55 percent in the far northwest -- is not in drought. But 96 percent remains abnormally dry, with 90 percent in moderate, 74 percent in severe, 55 percent in extreme and 31 percent in exceptional drought.

Together Green Alum Rue Mapp of Outdoor Afro writes for Seattle Times

Oakland native Rue Mapp is the founder of Outdoor Afro, a group that encourages African Americans to reconnect with nature. She is also an Audubon Toyota Together Green Fellow who has found great success since being a part of the Audubon family. Recently she wrote about her mission for The Seattle Times:

Today, many African Americans believe they have little to do with the environment and it has little to do with them. In the coming decades, I’d like that attitude to be different. I’d like to see more and more African Americans make the natural world a part of everyday life, and in our mainstream media representation, so that seeing a person of color on a hiking trip is no big deal.

Read the entire piece here.

Southland to celebrate second annual Bird LA Day May 7
Press Center

Bird LA Day coming May 7

— Angelenos will celebrate the birds of Southern California and LA's Biodiversity at the second annual Bird LA Day, a series of decentralized bird- and nature-themed events throughout the greater Los Angeles area.
Bird enthusiasts invited to join coast-wide effort on May 7 to spot Brown Pelicans
Press Center

Bird enthusiasts invited to join coast-wide effort on May 7 to spot Brown Pelicans

— Two hour birding blitz along Pacific coast will aid conservation of an iconic species.

Pixar's newest short animated movie is about a shorebird

Pixar has announced a new short animated film and it's about a shorebird. The Emeryville-based company was across the street from our old headquarters but according to an Entertainment Weekly article, it was inspired by the creator's runs along San Francisco Bay:

The inspiration for the six-minute short — about a hungry baby sandpiper learning to overcome hydrophobia — came from less than a mile away from Pixar Studios in Emeryville, California, where veteran Pixar animator and Piper director Alan Barillaro would run alongside the shore and notice birds by the thousands fleeing from the water but returning between waves to eat.

“Seeing the way these sandpipers react to waves and run, I always felt, ‘Gosh, that’s a film, that’s a character,’” says Barillaro, who began toying with animation software as a personal challenge to design a non-speaking character who was afraid of the water yet had to venture into it to eat. “It’s always fun to show a world we’re familiar with but from a different perspective. We’ve all been to the beach, but have we ever viewed water from just an inch off the sand? That could be very fearful from a bird’s perspective.”

Klamath deal will bring down dams and help fish, but refuges and waterfowl remain high and dry
Press Center

Klamath deal will bring down dams and help fish, but refuges and waterfowl remain high and dry

— The Klamath Basin wildlife refuges, which sustain 80% of ducks and geese that use the Pacific Flyway, still need help.

Big announcement tomorrow about the Klamath

California Governor Jerry Brown will join Oregon Governor Kate Brown and a group of other state officials at the Klamath river tomorrow to make a “major announcement about water supply reliability, environmental restoration and hydroelectric dams.” Here some of the hazy detail from a North Coast Journal article:

It’s unclear exactly what the announcement will be, but it’s expected the officials will present a ratification of a new deal to revive what’s been dubbed the largest dam removal project in the nation’s history. The press release says only that the officials will be making an announcement that will "further progress toward the largest river restoration project in U.S. history."

The deal, struck in principle back in February, would see the states of Oregon and California form a nonprofit corporation to take over ownership of the dams from PacifiCorp, the energy company that currently owns the dams. The nonprofit would then rely on existing federal authority to decommission and remove the dams with funds already generated from PacifiCorp ratepayers and a California water bond.

Read the entire article here.

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