Tag Archives | birds

You’ve seen one, you’ve seen–well, one

White-breasted Nuthatch

White-breasted Nuthatch

Perhaps you have seen white-breasted nuthatches in your yard.  They’re heart-warming little clowns, upside down more than right side up, with quizzical smiles in their dished-up bills, and funny little honking chirps, something like the beeping of a construction truck backing up.

Casually observed, they all look the same.  But their variations in the US alone have been categorized into four subspecies that speak–or beep–in different languages.  Other birds are similarly variable.  Robins differ geographically and in depth of color; seven subspecies are recognized.  Eleven types of crossbills are known–the crisscrossing of their bills variably suited to the different kinds of cones they crack for dinner, and their separate menus dividing them into different social groups and dialects.

Red Crossbills By Elaine R. Wilson, www.naturespicsonline.com

We’ve all heard about the loss of nature’s biodiversity, and perhaps how that loss strips ecosystems of the genetic flexibility to remain vibrant and productive in new circumstances–say, facing new chemicals, new climate, or new viruses.  We generally understand the incalculable value of nature in enriching our lives, and now we have priced at some $180 trillion the commercial value of natural processes such as crop pollination, pest control, flood protection, greenhouse gas sequestration, medicine development, and air and water cleansing.

We have also noted some of the biodiversity declines over the last half century – 30% loss of North American birds, similar declines in insects globally, widespread fisheries collapses.  It’s a grim picture.

But, we have argued, at least in the bird world, we really haven’t seen a flood of species extinctions.  Nuthatches, for instance, are declining in our area, but they are increasing in the boreal forest–just moving north, as many species are.  Unfortunately, the loss of biodiversity doesn’t happen with only species extinctions.  

Nuthatches are like everybody else: unique.  Their variety is not just as species or subspecies, but as individuals.  Some are bolder, others more cautious.  Almost certainly they have different disease resistances, risk awarenesses, and parental skills.  So as bird numbers decline, they lose diversity within their species.  

Probably we can more easily see the loss at the larger, subspecies level.  Imagine if all horses were Arabians that might win the Triple Crown, but there were no draft horses to pull our grandparents’ ploughs.  Imagine cattle with only Herefords and Angus, but not the Criollos that are replacing them as climates grow hotter and drier.  Imagine the corn monoculture, almost destroyed by the blight of 1970, without the older, noncommercial variety to rescue it with blight resistance.  Imagine people as only French, or Uyghur, or Hutu.  In every species, the variation within it gives flexibility and resilience.

And beauty.  I’m glad the nuthatches are doing well in the sub-arctic.  But we can do better than just imagine them somewhere not here.

There are many drivers of the worldwide die-offs, and many of those drivers are interrelated.  Climate change is one of the prime culprits.  The sooner we wean ourselves from fossil fuels the less we will push the loss of both species and individuals.  The more efficient we become with feeding ourselves without waste–in the field, out of the fridge, and through plant-rich diets–the more we will sustain the living world’s flexibility, resilience, and beauty.  These are things we can do, both broadly in the world and locally.  The material pay-off will not be instant, but it will be extensive and lasting.

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Becky Bowen on Confessions of a Shorebird Nut

You are cordially invited to come shore-birding on the North Mendocino Coast this spring and summer. Get the shorebird lowdown from Mendocino Coast Audubon’s Becky Bowen at our March chapter program via zoom on March 16. Becky will tell the story of the chapter’s Save Our Shorebirds conservation project and tell you where and when to find shorebirds in MacKerricher State Park.

Save Our Shorebirds grew out of a friendship between State Parks Environmental Scientist Angela Liebenberg and Becky in 2006. The two came up with the idea during long in-field surveys in MacKerricher State Park where Angela coordinated Western Snowy Plover volunteer monitors. The Western Snowy Plover is listed as threatened on the federal Endangered Species List. Local birding legend Dorothy Tobkin talked them into making the program about all shorebirds, because so many species that we see in MacKerricher State Park are listed as birds in decline by the National Audubon Society and American Bird Conservancy. Save Our Shorebirds (SOS) is an Audubon conservation program in cooperation with California State Parks.

Angela now is a Senior Environmental Scientist at California Fish and Wildlife. Becky, a retired production manager at ABC-TV in Hollywood, lives in Caspar and is the volunteer SOS data compiler and surveyor coordinator. “Coordinating the Audubon SOS program is not that different than working on an Academy Awards telecast,” she says. “You plan it, budget it, put it on, follow the numbers, and pay the bills. Always have a backup generator, and take good care of the crew, and, oh yes, the stars.”

The stars of SOS are the shorebirds of MacKerricher State Park and the volunteer surveyors who have gathered data about the birds since June of 2007. Please tune in to see photographs, listen to the SOS story, and hear what the birds have been telling us for 15 years.

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A multi-year analysis of Aechmophorus grebe breeding populations on Lake Almanor

Grebes on Nest

Hydroelectric production in the Lake Almanor basin continues to threaten our beloved grebes, Aechmophorus clarkii and Aechmophorus occidentalis. Western and Clark’s grebes are interbreeding colonial nesters that have historically nested at Lake Almanor numbering in the thousands. While adult populations are still found in the thousands, reproductive success has been hindered as the bird’s floating aquatic nests are continually beached as a result of reservoir operations. This presentation focuses on the water management decisions and the subsequent effects on grebe reproductive success.
Lindsay wood is an alumnus of Chico State and has ten years of environmental consulting experience with a special interest in water policy. She is a wildlife biologist and has conducted fisheries, avian, and herptile research throughout the Sacramento River watershed. Lindsay began studying Aechmophorus grebes in 2014 as a part of the Altacal Audubon’s project on Thermalito Afterbay in her hometown of Oroville. Since working with Plumas Audubon Society, she has observed the colony abandonment at Lake Almanor for the past three breeding seasons and is the primary author of Plumas Audubon Society’s 10 year report, “A multi-year analysis of Aechmophorus grebe breeding populations at four Northern California Lakes.

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Rare Bird Alert – Butte County

Merlin

Liam Huber has been actively and intensively birding Butte County for the last year and has been photo-documenting ALL the birds that live here. Being all over the county every day and finding the best birding spots, he has stumbled across many rare birds, which he will be highlighting alongside some of our special local birds.

Join Zoom Meeting » https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83473593849?pwd=M 0o0RnRmc2NCZ216bnB4YTFnMXM1dz09 » Meeting ID: 834 7359 3849 » Passcode: 207960

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Hawks in Flight ID with Russ Namitz

Hawks In Flight

With practice and experience, one can quickly separate different groups of raptors based on flight style, gestalt and plumage characteristics. Learn some tips and tricks about raptor identification on the wing, raptors at a distance and some local raptor viewing spots to practice your skills.

Russ Namitz was born and raised in Lincoln City, Oregon. At age 9, he was captivated by the furtive Pacific Northwest denizen of dank woods, the Varied Thrush. With a few stepping stones along the way, Russ really began actively birding the summer after graduating from Pacific University in Forest Grove, OR. His first, of many seasonal biology field jobs to follow, was searching for nesting Northern Goshawks in the Okanogan NF in Washington. In 2002, Russ finally took an Ornithology class, coincidentally from Humboldt State University. He enjoyed a year of birding in the area, meeting local celebrities and rubbing elbows with the talented birders and riff raff (sometimes the same people) in the area. Russ is a pelagic bird guide for Oregon Pelagic Tours and currently holds the Oregon Big Year record of 381 species.

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