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Latest News and Updates from Audubon in California

California Condor. Photo: Scott Frier/USFWS

Attack of the zombie birds
Audublog

Attack of the zombie birds

While these birds may not be the living dead, they do eat the dead.

Birding and Brews
Water

Birding and Brews

Fall is a great time to get outside and explore new birding hot spots in the West. But a long day spent birding can leave you parched, which is why this month, we are sharing our new Birds and Brews map with you.

When the California Condor flew above Southern California
Audublog

California Condors over Southern California

Vintage photographs from 1906 document when the great birds flew over Los Angeles and Pasadena.

YES on Prop 67!

Audubon California's Brigid McCormack was among the group that visited the Salton Sea this week to look at birds and take a look at new efforts to create habitat. Among the 82 species the group saw in two days was a Little Blue Heron, Verdin, and Phenopepla.

Making a place for everybody in the Audubon movement
Audublog

Making a place in the Audubon movement for everybody

Audubon California is working to make its staff and network more representative of the state's diverse population.

The birds of the Salton Sea need our help
Salton Sea

The birds of the Salton Sea need our help

Actress and conservationist Jane Alexander recalls her first birding trips to California's largest lake.

Rare white hummingbird at UC Santa Cruz

People at In the Australian Gardens   at the University of California, Santa Cruz Arboretum, are enjoying a look at a leucistic Anna's Hummingbird. It's almost completely white. Be sure to check out the photos.

Yosemite Area Audubon's nestbox program

We love this great video about the terrific work that the Yosemite Area Audubon Society is doing to install and monitor nestboxes in Madera, Mariposa, and Merced counties. In this fourth year of the program, the chapter has passed 1,100 fledglings to date.

Op-ed in LA Times: Where’s the money and the plan that will save the Salton Sea?

Opinion piece in Sunday's Los Angeles Times seeks to put some pressure on the state of Californi to take sufficient action to protect habitat and public health at the Salton Sea:

There have been glimmers of progress. Last fall, a U.S. Fish and Wildlife restoration project got under way at Red Hill Bay in the federal Sonny Bono Wildlife Refuge at the lake. It will transform 420 acres of dried-out landscape into shorebird habitat again, and it is already fully funded, leaving the $30 million promised by Washington in September for other projects.

At about the same time the feds went to work at Red Hill Bay, Brown signed a law that mandates the restoration of up to 12,000 acres of exposed lake bed by 2020 (the $80.5 million he set aside in the summer is a down payment on the mandate).

However, even if all pending restoration projects go forward (most haven’t broken ground) only 3,000 acres of dry lake bed would be reclaimed by 2020. A greater sense of urgency is needed if even the most modest of goals is to be met.

How you can help, right now