Latest News and Updates from Audubon in California
California Condor. Photo: Scott Frier/USFWS
We need your help to keep the Southwestern Willow Flycatcher on the Endangered Species List. Because its habitat is highly prized by developers and others, there has been constant pressure to remove it from the list. Now, these same forces are using highly suspect research to make their case. Please speak up for the Southwestern Willow Flycatcher by sending an email to the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service today.
Ian Souza-Cole, field technician for Audubon California, got some great photos of Tricolored Blackbirds in the Central Valley last week. We're working hard to make sure that these colonies are protected, and the young birds are able to fledge. Rapid declines have put this species on the brink in recent years. You can help the birds right now.
Sea & Sage Audubon Society was interviewed by The Orange County Register to protect birds with spring fever from crashing into mirrors and other reflective surfaces:
“Every spring we get California towhees and song sparrows attacking the side mirrors on our cars,” said Trude Hurd, project director of education for Sea and Sage Audubon. “Males are feeling very territorial, so they try to drive the intruder in the mirror away.”
“We don’t want a bird wasting its energy,” Hurd said. “That energy needs to be spent on nesting. It’s never going to be able to drive that bird in the mirror away.”
Read the entire article here.
Southern California chapter network manager Travis Abeyta was interviewed by San Gabriel Valley Tribune about a pair of amateur birders discovery of a pair of Bald Eagles in Angeles National Forest. From the article:
Abeyta positively identified the bird as a bald eagle chick, about 10-12 weeks old, using photographs provided by this newspaper group.
Hikers and amateur birders Joann and Dennis Sanderson of Azusa saw the juvenile bald eagle, covered in brownish feathers and with a sharp, curved beak but lacking the distinctive white head, peeping out of the nest Saturday morning. On Sunday evening, the couple returned and saw an adult bald eagle with the white-feathered head. The same adult pair were featured in a photo Dennis Sanderson took in May 2015, shown nesting in the exact same tree, located a few miles north of Azusa in the San Gabriel Mountains...
The large nest, built high in an old, columnar tree, near a body of water good for fishing yet far away from people represent telltale bald eagle nesting behavior, Abeyta said.
Mostly, bald eagles in California thrive in the Klamath Basin and in the upper Pacific Northwest, he said. But the species, the beloved national bird of the United States, has been spotted in more unusual places of late, including Irvine Lake in Orange County and Lake Cachuma in Santa Barbara County, he said...
Kimball Garrett, the ornithology collections manager for the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum and author of “Birds of the Los Angeles Region,” said finding a nesting bald eagle in this area is a rare thing. He also positively identified the bald eagle from pictures provided to him.
Cool article talking about how Red-crowned Parrots that escaped from the pet trade have built thriving populations in California and Texas -- to the point that the non-native U.S. population is doing better than the native population in Mexico.
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