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Latest News and Updates from Audubon in California

California Condor. Photo: Scott Frier/USFWS

LA Times poll shows Californians don't see drought as reason to ease environmental protections

The Los Angeles Times reports:

After four parched years, most California voters seem to be taking the drought in stride, saying it has had little to no effect on their daily lives. They oppose sacrificing environmental protections to expand water supplies and generally approve of how Gov. Jerry Brown has handled the crisis, according to a new statewide USC Dornsife/Los Angeles Times poll...

Given a choice between protecting the environment at the expense of water supply or ensuring water supply even if that damages the environment, 50% of those polled favored the environment and 34% picked water supply.

Continue reading the entire article here.

Another Audubon-sponsored bill heads to the Governor's desk this week

Assembly Bill 1482, establishing a Strategic Growth Council that will oversee climate adaptation for critical habitat, passed out of the Senate yesterday.  The bill would require state agencies to consider climate adaptation strategy when making decisions. Audubon California co-sponsored the bill with Assembly Member Rich Gordon.

Birds on the brink get the Steadman treatment. Illustrator Ralph Steadman -- yes, that Ralph Steadman -- has a new book coming out featuring his illustrations of birds on the brink of extinction. The book is called Nextinction. The above image is his take on the Laysan Duck.

Audubon-sponsored bill protecting wildlife corridors heads to governor's desk

Legislation that will make it state policy to protect wildlife corridors passed out of the State Senate Friday and is on its way to Gov. Jerry Brown’s desk for his signature. Assembly Bill 498, co-sponsored by Audubon California and authored by Assembly Member Marc Levine, will help birds by protecting vital linkages between important habitat areas. These protections will also give birds a better chance of surviving the challenges of climate change, as many of these corridors are also habitat strongholds or connect strongholds that birds and other wildlife need to survive in an environment altered by climate change.

“As we learn more about the habitats that will serve as strongholds for birds and other wildlife in California, it is vital that we also identify ways to connect them,” said Mike Lynes, Audubon California’s director of public policy. “Not only will Assembly Bill 498 help California protect its most vital landscapes, but it will also ensure that we make the best conservation investments as well.”

Assembly Bill 498 will make it a policy of the state that, whenever a project is proposed in an area defined as a wildlife corridor, the proponent will be encouraged to work with the Department of Fish and Wildlife to ensure the continued functioning of that corridor.

According to a study released in September 2014 by the National Audubon Society, 170 California bird species will be at risk of extinction in the next several decades due to global warming. This legislative session, Audubon California is supporting proposed bills that reduce the carbon pollution that causes climate change, and bills that will help birds survive in a new environment.

Marin Audubon seals the deal protecting 5-plus acres of habitat in Corte Madera

Our congratulations to the Marin Audubon Society for finalizing the purchase of 5.2 acres of former tidal marsh proptery in Corte Madera this week. The Audubon chapter raised more than $1 million to finalize the purchase. According to Barbara Salzman, president of Marin Audubon, the next step is to conduct a full restoration of the marsh, after which the property will be donated to the State Department of Fish and Wildlife for long-term protection as part of the Corte Madera Ecological Reserve. Audubon California was able to help this project with funding from the Wimberly Foundation.

Hummingbirds: The enemy of my enemy is my friend

How do hummingbirds keep their nests safe from jays and other predators? Simple, according to a new study, they set their nests up next to bigger predators, such as hawks. Apparently, the hawks don't have the energy and speed to take on the hummingbirds, but they do scare off smaller predators that might attack the nest. Ergo, the enemy of my enemy is my friend.

Why yes, California can get to 50% less gas by 2030

As the California Legislature wraps up its 2015 session this week, the hot topic is the fate of Senate Bill 350, which seeks to cut California's use of petroleum by half by 2030. That sounds like a steep cut, right? At least that's what the oil industry wants you to think, warning of gas rationing and mileage tracking. But the truth is that this goal is actually quite within reach. As the San Jose Mercury News' Paul Rogers reports:

"Yet lost in the debate are two key facts:

The state will get halfway to that goal even if it does nothing. That's because of federal rules put into place in 2009 by President Barack Obama to double the gas mileage standards for new U.S. vehicles to 54.5 miles per gallon by 2025.

Second, the rest of the difference can be made up simply by enforcing -- and in some cases strengthening -- existing laws passed over the last 15 years to boost electric cars, promote mass transit and reduce the amount of carbon in fuels, according to experts who have done the math."

Read the rest, very enlightening.

Mountain Lion Tracks found in Fay Canyon on part of the Canebrake Ecological Reserve. From the tracks we can tell this lion pounced and may have caught something small and then walked off. The Kern River Preserve helps to and connect the Domeland and Kiavah Wilderness Areas. Many animals moving through these vast wilderness areas include the riparian forest in their wanderings

No more magpies in Fresno? Not on our watch. Research shows that unless we do something about climate change, we could lose the iconic Yellow-billed Magpie forever. Don't let that happen. Support the legislative effort to reduce the emissions that drive climate change -- in Fresno, and everywhere else. Speak up today.

Op-ed: Drought is not the time to attack environmental protections
Audublog

Op-ed: Drought is not the time to roll back environmental protections

"The drought is a crisis for everyone," argues Audubon California's Brigid McCormack in the Los Angeles Times.

How you can help, right now