News

Latest News and Updates from Audubon in California

California Condor. Photo: Scott Frier/USFWS

Look who's back

Photo: Bob Hinz

Our friendly Bald Eagle is back at our Richardson Bay Center & Sanctuary, this time using the newly restored Aramburu Island shoreline.

San Francisco Bay loses one of its most dedicated champions
Audublog

San Francisco Bay loses one of its most dedicated champions

Sylvia McLaughlin was one of the original founders of Save the Bay -- and also served as a National Audubon Society board member.

Marie Cerda's birder vest

"I love birding because I love the outdoors and it gives me a way to interact with the natural world that is active and keeps me learning. It's like a scavenger hunt. I started the vest because a friend and I made up birding nicknames when we ran a birding blog and I had a lot of patches from various parks, etc I had visited while birding. I often wore the west while birding anyway and I thought it would be fun to have a sort of birding biker vest."

Marie Cerda
Alameda, CA 

@_primalux_

Brigid McCormack op-ed: It's always a drought for Central Valley birds, even when it's raining

Audubon California Executive Director Brigid McCormack speaks today in Water Deeply about the continuing problems that Central Valley birds face due to a lack of watered habitat:

"Finding habitat in California’s Central Valley wasn’t a problem for migratory ducks and geese 150 years ago. There weren’t wildlife refuges – but they didn’t need any. The Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers created a vast green floodplain that hosted up to 40 million birds.

Habitat for the valley’s waterfowl today – even though their numbers have fallen to around five million – is much harder to find. Water has been diverted. Wetlands have been carved up for farms and communities. Drought has parched the landscape.

The rain we’re getting now will help. But it’s important to remember that, these days, it’s a drought for ducks and geese even when it’s raining."

New bird species seen at Sonoma Creek Marsh

Wilson's Snipe Photo: shell game/Flickr creative commons

Yesterday was the first survey the Audubon team was able to do since construction ended at the Sonoma Creek Enhancement Project. In the marsh and along the newly formed channel during a high tide (>5’), the group counted:

  • 600 small shorebirds (Western/Least Sandpipers/Dunlin);
  • 117 Greater Yellowlegs;
  • 69 Willet;
  • 2 Long-billed Curlew;
  • 5 Black-bellied Plovers;
  • 1 Wilson’s Snipe. The Snipe was never seen in the marsh during surveys prior to construction.

Later during a ‘low’ tide, the group encountered smaller numbers of birds but spotted a rare Lesser Yellowlegs among a group of Greater Yellowlegs.

The group counted a couple of Northern Harriers scouting the area for meals, as well as a White-tailed Kite.

It's hard to overestimate the importance of the Salton Sea to migratory birds

We took a look at the migratory paths of several different birds. Look what they all have in common.

The Salton Sea is one of the most important migratory stops along the Pacific Flyway. But it’s hard to understand what this means without seeing it visually. So we took a sample of birds and tracked their migratory pathways through California – note the one thing they all have in common. And this is just a handful of the 400 species that make regular use of the Salton Sea.

A few more things to consider:

  • The Salton Sea hosts the largest interior wintering population of Western Grebes and 90% of the overwintering population of Eared Grebes.
  • 50% of the Pacific Flyway population of Ruddy Duck, Cinnamon Teal, and Northern Shoveler use the Sea.
  • It is home to 40% of the global population of the Federally Endangered Yuma Ridgway’s Rail.
  • It is the primary wintering area in the interior U.S. for California Brown Pelican and the American White Pelican.
  • And this is just the beginning. We'll be talking more about the Salton Sea in the coming weeks and months.

Point Lobos Black Oystercatcher docent loves volunteering

Mary Conway recalls one of her favorite interactions with the public at Point Lobos State Reserve.

More on the mysterious Phainopepla

The Phainopepla is one of our favorite birds. Photo: Lip Kee Yap

We at Audubon California have always had a thing for the mysterious Phainopepla, that silky flycatcher of the southwest. Little did we know that the bird's nickname is the Black Cardinal. Seriously, what could be cooler than that? Anyway, read more about this cool species in this terrific article just posted by the San Diego Union-Tribune.

Audubon network helping Pacific Brown Pelicans
Audublog

Audubon network helping Pacific Brown Pelicans

Our beautiful Pacific brown pelicans are the iconic seabird of our wild coast. These birds are experiencing hard times, but action on the part of the Audubon network and federal agencies is helping.

Birds flocking to completed tidal marsh enhancement

Construction wrapped up in November on our 400-acre tidal marsh enhancement project at Sonoma Creek in the San Pablo Bay National Wildlife Refuge, located in the northern part of San Francisco Bay. The new habitat is already attracting a lot of birds.

How you can help, right now