Author Archive | Larry Jordan

Yellow-billed Magpies

Yellow-billed Magpie

Yellow-billed Magpie photo by David Bogener

Endemic. It means they live nowhere else in the world–and we’re lucky enough to have a beautiful California endemic right here!

Yellow-billed magpies live in a swath from Redding down to Santa Barbara. They are seldom seen away from the scattered large oaks of that stretch, and never seen outside the state, where they leave the turf to their black-billed relatives.

The only thing not beautiful about these birds is their voice, a chatter variably squeaky and raspy. But visually, from yellow bill to long, graceful tail, they are striking. Clean white shoulders and belly offset their silky black feathering, which in good light shines with a deep cerulean blue. Their wingbeat, for a bird as tough as magpies, has a gossamer flow to it. If a group of crows is called a murder, we should speak of a waltz of magpies! And they look at you as if they know what they’re doing—as well they might.

Magpies, jays, and crows are part of a family of birds known as corvids. Like people, corvids usually live in social groups—not synchronized flocks, but neighborhoods of individuals. Also like people, they can physically manipulate their environment—people with opposable thumbs, corvids with long, hefty, all-purpose bills. These physical and social characteristics seem to promote problem-solving in creatures as varied as parrots, wolves, dolphins, and apes.

Corvid studies have shown these birds to far surpass Harvard students in remembering where they have hidden acorns. But their thinking gets more complex, too. Crows—much more studied than magpies–are socially and mechanically adept. Those who have pilfered other crows’ acorn stash will bury the food but then re-hide it when their chums aren’t looking! As mechanical engineers, they have replicated Aesop’s old fable—not only getting a drink by dropping pebbles in a vase to raise the water level, but dropping pebbles to raise a floating piece of meat, and declining to drop pebbles to retrieve the meat in a vase half-filled with sand instead of water.

Alas, corvid intelligence cannot solve all problems. West Nile virus has hit these birds particularly hard, and magpies show almost no development of resistance. I very rarely see them on the Shasta College campus or at Lake Redding any more. Magpie families can still be seen at Kutras Pond and Anderson River Park. There they continue to prosper in the mix of tall oaks, open ground, and nearby water. They forage in the fields for bugs, seeds, lizards, or dropped sandwiches; they crack and eat acorns, and reportedly they will even pick insects off a deer’s back.
The oaks offer magpies elevated roosts and nesting sites, where they build their little towns of stick-and-mud nests with domed roofs. They line the interior with softer materials such as hair or grass, and there they raise their half-dozen nestlings each year.

But as for so many birds, a looming threat to those nestlings is climate change. Yellow-billed magpies are expected to lose over half their range by 2050. That’s a problem that neither corvid intelligence nor any other has yet resolved.

Turtle Bay – An in-town Treat

Cinnamon Teal Pair

Cinnamon Teal Pair

Since water is fundamental to all life on Earth, rivers create particularly desirable ecosystems for people and many other species. In Redding, it makes for good bird-watching right here in town.

At Turtle Bay the Sacramento River offers an especially prosperous riparian habitat. Along the Sundial stretch the river runs briskly, with gravel bars that riffle the water, oxygenating it, supporting abundant aquatic insect life. These insects become food for salmon, trout and other fish that in turn feed ospreys and cormorants, gulls, turkey vultures, kingfishers, fish-eating ducks such as mergansers, several species of grebes, and of course our famous eagles.

Many birds bypass the fish and eat the bugs directly. In winter, ducks from the high arctic and the Great Plains pothole country—golden-eyes, buffleheads, and ruddy ducks—along with the more local wood ducks and occasional scoters sheltering inland from the stormy ocean—gather for the Good Life of clean water and plenty of insects and snails. In spring, prolific hatches of aquatic insects provide food not just in the water but over it, protein and calories for cliff swallows up from South America, who nest colonially under the bridges and snatch winged breakfast for both themselves and their young.

Downriver, around the bend, the riverflow is broken into quieter bays and side channels that offer resting places for numerous species. There, along with Canada geese, more ducks of winter—mallards, gadwall, ring-necked ducks, and sometimes teal, shovelers, pintails, and canvasbacks—nibble at the pond plants, fattening up for the next spring’s long flights and nesting season.

Wading birds hunt the shorelines year round. Great blue herons, egrets, killdeer, yellowlegs, snipe, and spotted sandpipers stalk and snatch fish and invertebrates at the water’s edge.

Brush along the banks and around river backwaters provides homes for song sparrows, bushtits, and towhees, and vital feeding corridors for migrating warblers.

Above the brush, cottonwood trees create a spreading canopy for nesting and feeding. This riparian wood, especially in dead trees, is soft, so Nuttall’s and Downy woodpeckers readily excavate numerous nesting cavities, used in spring by bluebirds, titmice, nuthatches, wrens, tree swallows, and ash-throated flycatchers. The trees’ leafy twig-ends can hold the rocking cradles of orioles. Heavier branches form the foundations for robin nests, not to mention osprey and eagle eyries.

The Turtle Bay cliffs offer nesting to a pair of peregrine falcons, and merlins will appropriate the nests of other birds. These predators can prosper because the smaller birds they eat are so abundant.
It’s a rich little jewel, here in the heart of town, a gem connected to others by the flowing river that makes it all possible.

Wintu Audubon offers walks at Turtle Bay on the first Saturday of every month, meeting at 9am at the concrete monolith.

Federal Judge Rules to Protect Izembek Wilderness

Izembek National Wildlife Refuge

Court Upholds Interior Department’s Decision Against Road

ANCHORAGE, Alaska— In a victory for the conservation of Alaska’s wild public lands, the U.S. District Court today upheld U.S. Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell’s decision to protect Izembek National Wildlife Refuge and its designated wilderness.

Last year the court dismissed most of the legal claims made by King Cove and the state of Alaska, allowing only limited claims to go forward. The federal government has repeatedly studied a proposed land swap and road through the refuge, and consistently rejected the project because of its negative effects on the ecological resources and wilderness values of the refuge.

Izembek’s lagoon complex is a globally important ecosystem that contains one of the largest eelgrass beds in the world, providing food and habitat for fish and crabs that feed migratory birds from multiple continents. Virtually the entire world populations of Pacific black brant and emperor geese, and a significant portion of the threatened Steller’s eider population visits the refuge to rest and feed during spring and fall migrations.

Of Izembek’s 315,000 acres, 300,000 are protected as congressionally designated wilderness.

Since passage of the landmark Wilderness Act in 1964, no wilderness area has been stripped of protection for the purpose of constructing a road.

Organizations dedicated to protecting Izembek intervened in the case to protect the exceptional values of the refuge and its wilderness. The groups were represented by Trustees for Alaska, a nonprofit, public interest law firm.

“This decision is the right choice for Izembek wildlife and many Alaska communities. Izembek provides globally important habitat for migratory birds from several continents, including species that people use for subsistence across western Alaska,” said Jim Adams, policy director for Audubon Alaska.

“Izembek is a gem. It’s a national treasure that is—and should be—protected for generations to come. Today’s ruling is an affirmation that protecting wild places enriches all of us,” said Miyoko Sakashita, senior counsel at the Center for Biological Diversity.

“The court has rightly recognized the weakness in the legal claims underlying this lawsuit, and correctly upheld the Secretary of Interior’s rejection of a deeply flawed proposal to drive a road through this pristine wilderness of international significance,” said Jamie Rappaport Clark, president and CEO of Defenders of Wildlife. “The Izembek National Wildlife Refuge is critically important for iconic wildlife, including brown bears, caribou, salmon and hundreds of species of migratory birds. It deserves to be protected for future generations.”

“The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has conducted extensive scientific studies that repeatedly demonstrate the destructive nature of this unnecessary and extremely costly proposed road,” said David C. Raskin, president of the Friends of Alaska National Wildlife Refuges. “We applaud the decision of the court to uphold Secretary Jewell’s wise decision to protect this natural treasure, and we will continue our efforts to find a non-destructive solution to the concerns of the local communities.”

“We are heartened that the U.S. District Court recognized the congressionally designated wilderness resources of the Izembek National Wildlife Refuge by upholding a decision by Secretary Jewell and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,” said David Houghton, president of the National Wildlife Refuge Association. “We can now move forward with helping the people of King Cove find a transportation solution that does not include a road through one of the most biologically important places on the planet.”

“The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Department of the Interior have studied this issue exhaustively, and ruled that the road should not be built,” said Nicole Whittington-Evans, Alaska regional director for The Wilderness Society. “We are very pleased by the court’s ruling, and hope that this issue can finally be resolved by all parties working together to find a non-road alternative that will address local residents’ concerns while leaving Izembek’s globally significant resources intact.”

“Wilderness Watch and all of our members are gratified by the U.S. District Court ruling which upholds the decision made by Secretary Jewell against building a road across the Izembek Wilderness,” said Fran Mauer, Wilderness Watch Alaska chapter representative. “We will continue to work to assure that this great wildlife refuge and wilderness remains as it is, wild and free of human developments.”

Water Ouzel Feeding Nestlings at Lassen Volcanic National Park

American Dipper

Water Ouzel or American Dipper (Cinclus mexicanus)

One of the best things about our annual Lassen Park campout is that we get to see several species of mountain birds that we don’t normally see in the valley. I know for a certainty that I will be able to see one of my favorites, the American Dipper (Cinclus mexicanus), whenever I visit Lassen Volcanic National Park.

I call this bird the Water Ouzel because I like saying it – Water Ouzel. Click on photos for full sized images.

American Dipper

The American Dipper is North America’s only truly aquatic passerine, feeding on stream insects, insect larvae and sometimes other invertebrates, small fish, fish eggs, and flying insects. How many birds do you know that can fly underwater?

On the last day of our campout I wanted to see both the Mountain Bluebird and Cassin’s Finch before heading home, so I headed up to Bumpass Hell where both of these species can usually be spotted. I wasn’t disappointed. Not only did I find both species at the parking lot, I found my friend Frank Kratofil photographing some Marmots.

Marmot

Marmot at Bumpass Hell

I mention this because Frank is the one who told me about the Dipper nest on Kings Creek. So, after photographing the Mountain Bluebirds, Cassin’s Finches, Marmots and Picas, I stopped at Kings Creek and found this beautiful Water Ouzel nest atop a log in the creek…

American Dipper

with four hungry nestlings.

American Dipper

I knew they had to be close to fledging the way they were sticking their heads out of the nest.

American Dipper

Plus the adults were feeding them every few minutes.

American Dipper

They were begging so loud when the parents came with food that you could hear them above the sound of the rushing creek!

American Dipper

More food!

American Dipper

We’re hungry!

American Dipper

I’m on the way!

American Dipper

 Here I come!

American Dipper

Are you kids ever satisfied?

American Dipper

I shot this video of the adults feeding the nestlings at King’s Creek. Near the end of the video (2:05) you might catch one of the nestlings defecating out of the nest between two of its siblings.

The Plight of Cavity Nesting Birds

Western Bluebird Nestlings

Western Bluebird Nestlings Day 1

Some eighty-five species of North American birds excavate nesting holes (primary cavity nesters), use cavities resulting from decay, or use holes created by other species (secondary cavity nesters) in dead or deteriorating trees. Over half of those species may be encountered here in Northern California.

These deteriorating trees, commonly called snags, have often been considered undesirable by forest and recreation managers because they are not esthetically pleasing, conflict with other forest management practices, may harbor forest insect pests, or may be fire or safety hazards. In the past such dead trees were often eliminated from the forest during a timber harvest. As a result, in some areas few nesting sites were left for cavity-nesting birds.

Purple Martin Pair

Purple Martin Pair at Nest Cavity

Many species of cavity-nesting birds have declined because of habitat reduction. In the eastern United States, where primeval forests are gone, Purple Martins depend almost entirely on man-made nesting structures. In the southeast the Red-cockaded Woodpecker is currently listed as near threatened (NT), primarily as a result of habitat destruction, and the Ivory-billed Woodpecker is listed as critically endangered (CR) and thought by many to be extinct. The wood duck was also very scarce in many portions of its range – at least in part for the same reason – and probably owes its present status to provision of nest boxes and protection from overhunting.

As early as the 1930’s people noticed that the Eastern Bluebird was fast disappearing from their fields, their backyards and their lives. Dwindling sightings of these most endearing of North American birds encouraged several bluebird enthusiasts to sound the alarm concerning their plight. In addition to nesting sites for bluebirds being lost to deforestation and snag removal, competition for the remaining sites was brought about by the increasing populations of two non-native species, the English (House) Sparrow

House Sparrow Male

House Sparrow Male

and the European Starling.

European Starling at Nest Cavity

European Starling at Nest Cavity

After decades of alerting people to the plummeting bluebird problem, Dr. Lawrence Zeleny, a retired agricultural biochemist living in Maryland, with the help of several supporters from National Audubon Society chapters and the Audubon Naturalist Society, founded the North American Bluebird Society (NABS) in 1978.

The North American Bluebird Society is a non-profit education, conservation and research organization that promotes the recovery of bluebirds and other native cavity-nesting bird species in North America. An affiliate of the NABS here in California is the California Bluebird Recovery Program (CBRP). Both of these groups promote placing and monitoring nest boxes (birdhouses) in optimal locations for cavity nesting birds. Because of these programs and hundreds of thousands of nest boxes put up across North America, cavity nesting birds are on the rebound!

If you have birdhouses in your yard and want to learn how to monitor them and add your nesting statistics to the CBRP database, or you are interested in information on how to build, place and monitor nest boxes, our Wintu Audubon webmaster, Larry Jordan can help. He is the Shasta County coordinator for the CBRP and you can contact him by email at webmaster@WintuAudubon.org

You can also find lots of information about birdhouses and attracting birds on our “Attracting Birds” page.