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Latest News and Updates from Audubon in California

California Condor. Photo: Scott Frier/USFWS

Anchovy decline spells big trouble for Pacific seabirds

Anchovy school. Photo: Adam Knight

Our friends at Pew Charitable Trusts today highlight on their blog a potential decline in the population of anchovy that could mean real problems for the many Pacific seabirds that rely on them to live:

"Over the past few months, onlookers have flocked to California’s Monterey Bay to watch humpback whales gorge on thick schools of anchovies. Dolphins, seabirds, and bigger fish also congregated in the bay to feed on the large concentration of anchovies clustering near shore. It seems to be the very picture of a healthy ocean, right? In fact, leading scientists from California’s Farallon Institute tell us it’s a mirage."

Researchers note say that the anchovy are bunching up along coast in response to climate change and low numbers, and that a recent upsurge in anochovy fishing is coming at exactly the wrong time. Brown Pelican, for instance, and it is quite likely that their recent difficulties breeding in the Channel Islands can be linked to the decline in anchovy.

We'll be tracking this issue closely, and will have more news as it develops.

Brown Pelican. Photo: Mike Baird
Update on the fight to save Humboldt Bay
Audublog

Update on the fight to save Humboldt Bay

Humboldt Bay is one of the most important places for shorebirds and waterbirds. We're working to keep it that way.

Hats off to our amazing Audubon Starr Ranch Sanctuary banding volunteers

Audubon Starr Ranch Sanctuary is fortunate to have a group of six bird banders who assist with winter and breeding season songbird banding, some since we started in 1999.  In October, these dedicated and passionate volunteers met with Starr staff to discuss our banding station needs and offered to make or purchase equipment and supplies.  Some are sewing bird bags used for holding birds for ageing, sexing, and banding before release.  Others are purchasing supplies to renew banding infrastructure.  And the owner of a Wild Birds Unlimited shop in Yorba Linda, Valerie Sinex, another bander, donated funds to buy new nets.  These banders were trained during workshops held at Starr Ranch to do the technical observations that the Institute for Bird Populations requires to analyze trends in songbird populations to protect birds on migration and wintering sites as well as breeding areas. We thank Al and Janet Baumann, Barbara Bruce, Debbie Gley, Carol Paquette, and Tom Sheffield.  Also pictured are 2015-16 ornithologist Alison Nevins and Dana Kamada, who was the ornithologist who started the MAPS breeding season banding station at Starr Ranch with Sandy in 1999.

Presented without comment

Man-made climate change to increase risk of extreme fire seasons in California

A California wildfire. Photo: Erick Pleltez

Man-made climate change will likely increase the risk of extreme fire seasons in California over the coming decades, according to a new report from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The report also indicated that 2014 offered up the highest risk for extreme fires of any year on record,  According to the study, high risk means "more days with intense heat and little or no recent rain, creating the perfect conditions for a big blaze."

The Lesser Spotted Adele

Adele's music video for Hello gets turned into a David Attenborough nature documentary and it's incredible.

 Desolation of former cormorant breeding site highlights Salton Sea's ecological decay
Audublog

Desolation of former cormorant breeding site highlights Salton Sea's ecological decay

Mullet Island used to be the second largest breeding site for Double-crested Cormorants. Now it's a bird graveyard.

Three years ago, this stretch of Highway 45 in Colusa County was a treeless, plantless, birdless, insectless Caltrans right-of-way. Thanks to the vision of the Sycamore Family Trust, Audubon California, USFWS Partners for Fish and Wildlife program, Colusa County Resource Conservation District, Colusa High School, and others, this is what it looked like yesterday.

Posted by Audubon California Working Lands Program on Thursday, November 5, 2015

Bringing color to Colusa County

Three years ago, this stretch of Highway 45 in Colusa County was a treeless, plantless, birdless, insectless Caltrans right-of-way. Thanks to the vision of the Sycamore Family Trust, Audubon California, USFWS Partners for Fish and Wildlife program, Colusa County Resource Conservation District, Colusa High School, and others, this is what it looked like yesterday.

Golden Gate Audubon celebrates Altamont win

Golden Gate Audubon Society was at the forefront of the recent victory at Altamont. Their Executive Director, Cindy Margulis, reflects on the hard-won fight in a blog post on their website. Read it here.

Spreading the word about bird-friendly farming
Working Lands

Spreading the word about bird-friendly farming

Last week, my hospitality was directed at hemispheric travelers of the human variety, Australian biologists. The group was visiting California to learn how to create bird habitat on rice.

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