Tag Archives | Peregrine Audubon Society

Steve Hampton on Birds and Climate Change

Join us on Zoom for Steve Hampton’s timely presentation about birds and climate change: the changes that are already happening, with a special focus on Northern California.

Birds are responding to climate change, and have been since the mid-1980s. It has only become clear recently. What started as a little bump in the data is now clearly the start of a massive exponential curve. Lesser Goldfinches and California Scrub-jays, among many others, are invading the Pacific Northwest. Anna’s Hummingbirds are over-wintering in Alaska. All booby species have been removed from California’s review list. And Western Tanagers are now regular in winter in increasing numbers. At the same time, Wrentits and Oak Titmice are going nowhere. The world of Ivory Gulls and Black Guillemots is melting. Birds are evacuating from the Mojave Desert and literally shrinking, physically, from the Amazon to North America to the Middle East.

The world is changing so fast, and birds with it, that papers are outdated by the time they are published. But the main themes are the same:

  • Many birds are responding quickly to rapid climate change.
  • Some are not.
  • Birds, as a kingdom, like warm weather, and did very well during the last major global warming event 55 million years ago.
  • At the species level, there will be winners and losers.

Steve Hampton has been birding since he was 7 years old. He lived in Davis for 30 years and worked for California Dept of Fish and Wildlife much of that time, where he was involved in oil spill response, natural resource damage assessment, seabird restoration, and partnerships with Native communities. He writes regularly for Birding magazine, recently served on the American Ornithological Society’s Ad-hoc Committee on English Bird Names, and currently resides in Port Townsend, where he serves as the conservation chair and CBC compiler for Rainshadow Bird Alliance. He combines his love of birds with a PhD in resource economics to analyze bird data. His article in the December 2022 issue of Birding summarized the recent research on birds and climate change. He will present that information, with a special focus on Northern California.

Use this link to join us on January 21. We will begin the presentation at around 7 pm.
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/88126899921?pwd=4oj2pHk0MEoVcX8j1fkHTDv7yw9OTz.1

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Greg Guisti: The History and Biology of Clear Lake Fish

The history of fish in Clear Lake is a twisted tale of trial and error introductions, indiscriminate pest control, and recent awakenings of the value of its native species.

Clear Lake, one of the oldest lakes in the world and the largest natural lake entirely within the boundaries of California, has a rich and colorful story to tell about its fishes. A playground for 19th century fish enthusiasts, Clear Lake was a testing ground for the introduction of eastern fish species. At the time of European settlement, Clear Lake had at least 15 native species and they were deemed “undesirable”. Today, only 6 of those native species may be considered common. They have largely been displaced by the 21 introduced fish species present in the lake today.

Greg Giusti is a retired University of California Forests and Wildland Ecology Advisor, a resident of Lake County, and a long-time fisherman on Clear Lake. This will be an interesting evening.

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/85792876431?pwd=VXROVEdrekMrZVJ2OXV3VnM2SEhHZz09
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Get to Know Your Local Birds!

Peregrine Audubon’s Christmas Bird Count (CBC) has those experts who can help bring us a step closer to our goal to bird identification. Join us on Tuesday, December 14 at 7:00 p.m. on Zoom when George Gibbs will point out distinguishing field marks of our Ukiah area birds. He will discuss and illustrate the sparrows and finches, jays and blackbirds, ducks and waders, as well as the raptors, the hawks and owls, all in living color.
Zoom in with your tough questions for the experts. What birds can I expect in my back yard this winter? How do sparrows and finches differ? Is it really possible to see eagles in the Ukiah Valley? What are the ducks and gulls at Lake Mendocino? Anyone interested in bird calls? Our speaker can help with that too.
Peregrine Audubon offers help in the field. Beginners and experienced birders will benefit at the Zoom Meeting on December 14 meeting at 7PM and the sign up for the CBCount which takes place on Saturday, December 18. George will explain how the Christmas Bird Count is going to work in this age of a pandemic.
Yard-birding has become much more popular this year and we are hoping this will be a way for many of you to safely participate in the Christmas Bird Count. A Tally Sheet showing expected species and those requiring further documentation will be available to those birding from home. We ask that you get your tally sheets to your area leader within 24 hours after the count! Certain area leaders might be willing to delegate birding regions to individuals if you reach out to the area leaders themselves, or contact George Gibbs. Above all, you must follow all local Health Orders, maintain social distancing, and proper masking.
George will also give a presentation that he, Bob Kieffer and local photographers have put together over the last few years.
Many of us will be counting at home this year if we live within the 15-mile diameter count circle (which includes Ukiah). By all means, contact George  (707-468-8022) for details.

Join Zoom Meeting Link
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83827814627?pwd=NTBhMmVLVUplcTE4UWJBaTNodnhZdz09

Meeting ID: 838 2781 4627
Passcode: CAUK707
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Meeting ID: 838 2781 4627
Passcode: 7909535
Find your local number: https://us02web.zoom.us/u/kcNJOecsgr

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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.

To receive links to the meetings, subscribe to our mailing list on our home page.

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Wildfires and Wildlife

Wildfires are an important part of many ecosystems around the world. Fires provide an opportunity for new growth, to return nutrients to the soil, and to create a wholly unique type of habitat. Many species are adapted for these ever-changing systems, and they have developed a wide variety of strategies for making the best of the post-fire habitat. However, these systems exist in a delicate balance. Recently, forest fires have been increasing in size, intensity, and frequency due to human activities, and even fire-adapted species are struggling to keep up. In this talk we discuss how animals survive and thrive in a system defined by fire and what we can do to help protect the balance of these special ecosystems.

Lynn Schofield is a biologist for the Institute for Bird Populations. Her research covers a diversity of topics including bird migration, forest fire ecology, and wetland conservation. In addition to using her research to help inform effective conservation strategies, Lynn also works to help make connections with nature accessible to all. She is one of the core members of the Cal Falcons social media project, a frequent trip leader for the Bay Area chapter of the Feminist Bird Club and a long-time volunteer for the Golden Gate Raptor Observatory.

Join our Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84733389834?pwd=K2lMTnczczlVaUhSMlk3R0dZOGZpQT09

Meeting ID: 847 3338 9834
Passcode: 973520
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Dial by your location
+1 669 900 6833 US (San Jose)
+1 253 215 8782 US (Tacoma)
+1 346 248 7799 US (Houston)
+1 301 715 8592 US (Washington DC)
+1 312 626 6799 US (Chicago)
+1 929 205 6099 US (New York)
Meeting ID: 847 3338 9834
Passcode: 973520
Find your local number: https://us02web.zoom.us/u/kAtl65pjv

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