We just got this update from ornithologist and educator Holly M. Garrod, reporting from the Audubon Starr Ranch Sanctuary in Orange County:
This week proved to be very exciting bird-wise. The other day I watched a Merlin fly right through the canyon! (And no, not the wizard). A Merlin is a small falcon-like bird that often spends winter down in Southern California. And speaking of wintering birds...
This week the focal bird species is the Red-breasted Sapsucker (Sphyrapicus ruber)! They have just finished their migration and will be spending their winter here. Sapsuckers look a bit different than the familiar Acorn Woodpecker. Their head and breast is entirely red (hence the name). They have a dark back, yellow belly and are easily recognized by a white vertical stripe running up their side. I've been hearing their 'waah' call around the oaks. Be sure to keep an eye out for them near the persimmon tree, it's one of their favorite spots to hang out. When sapsuckers aren't munching on fruit, they make wells in the tree where sap pools and they can drink it. Interestingly, several hummingbird species have been observed following Red-breasted Sapsuckers and making use of their sap wells as a food source. (photo above of a red-breasted Sapsucker with sap wells, by Greg Gillson)
Here is a list of all the birds seen and heard at Starr Ranch this past week:
1. Turkey Vulture
2. Red-shouldered Hawk
3. Red-tailed Hawk
4. Band-tailed Pigeon
5. Mourning Dove
6. Barn Owl
7. Great Horned Owl
8. Anna's Hummingbird
9. Acorn Woodpecker
10. Red-breasted Sapsucker
11. Nuttall's Woodpecker
12. Northern Flicker (Red Shafted subspecies)
13. American Kestrel
14. Merlin
15. Black Phoebe
16. Say's Phoebe
17. Cassin's Kingbird
18. Loggerhead Shrike
19. Hutton's Vireo
20. American Crow
21. Western Scrub Jay
22. Common Raven
23. Oak Titmouse
24. Bushtit
25. White-breasted Nuthatch
26. Bewick's Wren
27. Cactus Wren
28. Ruby-crowned Kinglet
29. Wrentit
30. Western Bluebird
31. Hermit Thrush
32. American Robin
33. California thrasher
34. Northern Mockingbird
35. European Starling
36. Yellow-rumped Warbler (Audubon subspecies)
37. Spotted Towhee
38. California Towhee
39. Fox Sparrow
40. Song Sparrow
41. Golden-crowned Sparrow
42. White-crowned Sparrow
43. Dark-eyed Junco (Oregon subspecies)
44. Western Meadowlark
45. Scott's Oriole
46. House Finch
47. Lesser Goldfinch
By Garrison Frost
HOTSPOT: Flyover of California's Birds and Biodiversity
California is a global biodiversity hotspots, with one of the greatest concentrations of living species on Earth.
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