Birds

California hosts an amazing diversity of birds

Morgan Quimby, a photographer and researcher for Monterey Bay Whale Watch in California, captured a stunning scene of a Brown Pelican diving for food against a backdrop of humpback whales and other seabirds. This image was submitted for the 2024 Audubon Photography Awards in the category: The Birds in Landscapes Prize.

California is famous for the spirit of its people, farms that feed millions, innovation that transforms the world, our magnificent coastlines, and Hollywood, to name a few. Audubon California would add our abundant bird life to that list. The more than 600 bird species that have been spotted in California make up about two-thirds of all birds species in North America, including the tiny Calliope Hummingbird, the elegant Black Phoebe, and the great California Condor.

More commonly seen California birds total around 450 species, making our state one of the country’s most diverse. The natural habitats that draw millions of breeding, migrating, and resting birds to California – the shorelines, wetlands, oak woodlands, deserts, and forests– include 175 places most important to birds (Audubon calls them Important Bird Areas), the most of any state in the Lower 48.

Birds are crucial components of healthy natural systems, serving as pollinators, predators, scavengers, seed dispersers, and engineers in riparian, wetland, and coastal habitats. Birds are indicators of broader ecosystem function and environmental health because they respond rapidly to climatic and other changes, and are relatively easy to see and study. Birds and humans need the same things – clean air, water, and land – so the future health of birds and that of humans is inextricably linked.

California is key link along the Pacific Flyway, the migratory route traveled by millions of birds every year. California wetlands, beaches, and other areas provide important habitat, stop over, feeding, and nesting sites for birds that travel from the Arctic to spots over 7,000 miles away in Chile, sustaining species that can be found throughout the Flyway.

How you can help, right now

Allen's Hummingbird and Climate Change
Birds

Allen's Hummingbird

The Allen's Hummingbird is one of California's most popular birds.

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Burrowing Owl
Birds

Burrowing Owl

This comical owl is incredibly popular, and also very much at risk.

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Black Oystercatcher in California and Oregon
Birds

Black Oystercatcher

The Black Oystercatcher is a dynamic resident of California's shorelines.

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Black-necked Stilt
Birds

Black-necked Stilt

The Black-necked Stilt is one of many shorebirds that needs our help.

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Brown Pelican
Birds

Brown Pelican

The Brown Pelican is one of California's most distinctive birds, and it very nearly disappeared altogether.

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Western Snowy Plovers in California
Birds

Western Snowy Plovers

California is a focal point for the conservation of this threatened shorebird.

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California Condor
Birds

California Condor

The California Condor is among the rarest and most imperiled birds in the world.

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Golden Eagle
Birds

Golden Eagle

The Golden Eagle is one of the largest and most agile raptors in the world.

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Greater Sage-Grouse
Birds

Greater Sage-Grouse

The Greater Sage-Grouse has become a lightning rod for conservation.

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Tras tres décadas desde la Proposición 187, los inmigrantes aún enfrentan obstáculos a los espacios verdes públicos
Right To Nature

Tras tres décadas desde la Proposición 187, los inmigrantes aún enfrentan obstáculos a los espacios verdes públicos

Para Juan Altamirano, director asociado de política de Audubon California, la lucha contra un legado racista en el uso del suelo en California es personal.

Three Decades after Prop 187, Immigrants Still Face Barriers to Public Green Spaces
Right To Nature

Three Decades after Prop 187, Immigrants Still Face Barriers to Public Green Spaces

For Audubon California Associate Policy Director Juan Altamirano, undoing California's history of racism in land use is personal.

The Rails are Rebounding at Sonoma Creek
Sonoma Creek Restoration

The Rails are Rebounding at Sonoma Creek

A marsh springs back (with a little help) in the North Bay

Dairies Help Save Tricolored Blackbirds
Tricolored Blackbird

Dairies Help Save Tricolored Blackbirds in the Central Valley

6 Years Strong - Audubon partners with NRCS and family dairy farmers in the Central Valley to protect threatened birds.

Huntington Beach Oil Spill Fouls Beaches Home to Federally Threatened Snowy Plovers
Seas & Shores

Huntington Beach Oil Spill Fouls Beaches Home to Federally Threatened Snowy Plovers

— Oiled Western Snowy Plover on shoreline in Huntington Beach
Audubon California: Orange County Oil Spill of Extreme Concern to Migrating Seabirds
Seas & Shores

Audubon California: Orange County Oil Spill of Extreme Concern to Migrating Seabirds

— “It is time to stop putting our coastal birds and communities at risk from the oil industry.”
You May Have to Look Harder, but some Birds are Still at the Salton Sea
Salton Sea

The Good, the Bad, and the Hopeful for Birds at the Salton Sea

You May Have to Look Harder, but Some Birds are Still at the Salton Sea

Top 16 Places to Spot Migratory Birds in California
Audublog

Top 15 places to Spot Migratory Birds in California

Fall Migration Is Ramping Up

Chart the Future of the Salton Sea
Salton Sea

Chart the Future of the Salton Sea

Community Engagement Opportunities Fall 2021

Victory! 170,000 Tricolored Blackbirds saved in 2021
Tricolored Blackbird

Victory! 170,000 Tricolored Blackbirds saved in 2021

Thanks to our agricultural partners,100% of thirteen Tricolored Blackbird colonies across the San Joaquin Valley in California were protected this year.