Skip to content

Free email delivery

Please sign up for email delivery in the subscription area to the right.
No salesman will call, at least not from us. Maybe from someone else.

Trish Oster’s Pergrines, again among the 2024 Top 100 Audubon Photos

July 2, 2025

[Posted by Chuck Almdale]

Link to 2024 National Audubon Society winners.
The 125th anniversary of Audubon magazine, the 15th installment of this competition, 2,300 entrants and over 8,500 submissions.
As before: All winners are clear, sharp, well-framed, interesting, unusual views, unusual behaviors, unusual angles.

Local photographer Trish Oster strikes again at NAS, this time at #37 with four Peregrine Falcons. Trish, who occasionally joins us on our Malibu Lagoon bird walks, gave me some background information on her photo, on the birds themselves and some additional photos.

Photo is larger on NAS site

Trish writes:
This particular female (Maxine)  is around 10 years old now.  
She arrived quite a few years ago and killed the resident female. We do not know where she came from. 

Maxine in 2024

[Her previous mate 02Z or “Tuzee”] disappeared last year while the 2 new chicks had just gotten old enough to fly around a little. He never returned and was determined to have died. There have also been reports that he was found dead and had been attacked and killed.

One of the 2025 chicks a few days ago

A new male (named Odin and thought to be around 3 years old) was finally accepted by her and they have three chicks this season. I went to visit the falcons this morning and as luck would have it, two of the three eyass walked up the cliff and it was the first time we got to see them out of the nest.

Odin in 2025, Maxine’s new mate, amid the family’s collection of bones
Odin in 2025, now branch manager

Maxine [now] looks very tired and not her usual self. 
I think she has had to teach Odin how to be a good father! LOL

The NAS website has the following photo information:

Category: Amateur
Location: San Pedro, California 
Camera: Canon EOS R6 with a Canon RF 100-500mm F/4.5-7.1 L IS USM lens;
1/3200 second at f/7.1; ISO 2000 
Behind the Shot: This past year, this Peregrine Falcon couple welcomed four eyases. The busy parents worked hard to keep the youngsters fed. The female in my photo was feeding one of the smaller eyases, which caused the two larger siblings, who had already had their share of the meal, to become agitated. One loudly begged, and the other sibling looked down with what seemed like an annoyed expression. I was handholding my camera, and the birds were moving quite erratically, so I used a higher shutter speed to obtain a sharp focus. The subtle colors of the ground cover, along with the muted background, gave the image a softer look and made the falcons stand out.  

The 2025 NAS contest winners will be announced in late September.

Breeding Bonanza: Malibu Creek State Park, 14 June 2025

June 30, 2025

[Text & 6/14/25 trip list by Jean Garrett, photos by Jay Juncosa, posted by Chuck Almdale]

Antler-sprouting deer (Ray Juncosa 6-14-25)

It was a lovely day with a surprising amount of birds considering (in some areas) the sparsity possibly caused by the fires. Over by the parking lot, the meadow was filled with Western Bluebirds, Lazuli Buntings, and some Blue Grosbeaks and California Scrub-Jays. 

Western Bluebird male (Ray Juncosa 6-14-25)

The lighting perfectly enhanced the colors giving us a vibrant range of blue. Best of all, the month of June still has the sounds of Spring. The occasional Allen’s Hummingbird, and later on several Anna’s Hummingbirds had plenty of flowers for nourishment. Of course there was the sound of the Common Yellowthroat teasing us before we could actually see one. Also, along the meadow were the swallows, mostly Violet-green and Tree but sometimes a Cliff, and with a careful look a White-throated Swift.

East end of the park where most people start (Trail Meister)
Two corvids chatting up a storm (Ray Juncosa 6-14-25)

Across the street, the huge, ancient Valley Oak had the clamor of chattering Acorn Woodpeckers and the occasional Nuttall’s. In the mountains surrounding the meadow, a young Red-shouldered Hawk sat on a nest. As we walked towards the trees, Hooded and Bullock’s Orioles were showing up. It seems we would always see the female first but there were some mature males that had a lot of orange-yellow. Overhead, Nanday Parakeets would flicker and squawk every once in a while. Chris was pointing out the Spanish clover showing how much it attracts the Acmon Blue Butterfly. 

California Wild Rose (Ray Juncosa 6-14-25)

As we walked towards the forest, Spotted Towhees were singing. In an opening of the trees a House Wren was on a snag, giving us a recital and letting us see him. Then on the cliff overhanging the river we could hear two Yellow-breasted Chats. With patience and with the sound fading then getting louder, we finally saw the bird and it was a lifer for one person. 

Malibu Creek (Ray Juncosa 6-14-25)

The river gave us a chance to see the Great Egret and the Great Blue Heron and a good look at some Turkey Vultures and a Kestrel blending so well against the snag he was perched on. Even a few Northern Rough-winged Swallows were circling around. When coming out of the forest, that clucking sound of the California Quail could be heard. Of course we got the usual Red-tailed Hawks, Crows and Ravens but also a Band-tailed Pigeon. All in all, we got 48 species — no record but we had such great views. The sun was just right, you could see the colors well and the birds still singing.  

Road to the craggy mountains (Ray Juncosa 6-14-25)

The list below is the only record we have for our Malibu Creek SP bird walks. The total for all four trips is now 80 species. Today’s trip turned up 15 species not seen on the three prior trips. Lots of sharp eyes. You never know what you’ll get.

Malibu CreekStatePark
Field Trips6/14/255/11/2411/12/1111/13/10
Mallard1052015
Ring-necked Duck 1
Bufflehead 2
California Quail20   
Pied-billed Grebe 1
Band-tailed Pigeon468012
Mourning Dove19522
White-throated Swift520
Black-chinned Hummer2   
Anna’s Hummingbird5312
Allen’s Hummingbird121
American Coot 2015
Killdeer1   
Dble-crested Cormorant11
Snowy Egret6   
Green Heron2   
Great Egret1   
Great Blue Heron2211
Turkey Vulture1010
White-tailed Kite 22
Cooper’s Hawk 21
Red-shouldered Hawk4231
Red-tailed Hawk4643
Belted Kingfisher 1
Red-naped Sapsucker 1
Red-breasted Sapsucker 21
Acorn Woodpecker2015815
Downy Woodpecker 12
Nuttall’s Woodpecker10441
Northern Flicker 152
American Kestrel1241
Nanday Parakeet118H
Cassin’s Kingbird   2
Western Wood-PeweeX   
Western Flycatcher34  
Black Phoebe4266
Say’s Phoebe 32
Ash-throated Flycatcher95
Cassin’s Kingbird42
Hutton’s Vireo 21
Loggerhead Shrike 21
California Scrub-Jay12626
American Crow6103030
Common Raven64810
Oak Titmouse22102012
Tree SwallowX   
Violet-green Swallow61
No. Rough-winged Swallow205
Barn Swallow3   
Cliff Swallow1020
Bushtit50101515
Wrentit8231
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 43
White-breasted Nuthatch9366
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher73
Canyon Wren31
No. House Wren111213
Bewick’s Wren122
California Thrasher2   
Western Bluebird82201
American Robin 1
Phainopepla412
House Finch1010304
Purple Finch 62
Pine Siskin 5
Lesser Goldfinch10101
Lark Sparrow 20
Dark-eyed Junco483012
White-crowned Sparrow 4020
Song Sparrow5641
California Towhee89124
Spotted Towhee6884
Yellow-breasted Chat21
Hooded Oriole2   
Bullock’s Oriole4   
Red-winged Blackbird101
Brown-headed Cowbird43
Orange-crowned Warbler85
Common Yellowthroat10621
Yellow Warbler812
Yellow-rumped WarblerX4040
Townsend’s WarblerX   
Wilson’s WarblerX   
Western Tanager 2
Black-headed Grosbeak2   
Blue Grosbeak2   
Lazuli Bunting61
Total Species: 8765474747

Project Phoenix: Investigating Bird Responses to Smoke | NHMLAC

June 30, 2025

[Posted by Chuck Almdale]
We received this today and are passing it on to our readers.

Hello fellow birders!

My name is Dr. Olivia Sanderfoot, and I am a postdoc at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County studying impacts of wildfire smoke on the health and behavior of birds. I am also Program Director of Project Phoenix, a regional community science program to investigate bird responses to smoke. 

Project Phoenix 2025 kicks off tomorrow, and we are looking forward to another summer of birding with our incredible volunteers. Will you join us to make 2025 our biggest year yet? Sign up today!

By participating in Project Phoenix, you are contributing to a vital dataset to help us understand how birds are impacted by wildfires in the American West. Together, we will discover how birds respond to smoke disturbance in real time and identify the places and resources birds need to thrive in the hotter and smokier summers to come.

Data collection will begin on Tuesday, July 1st and continue through the end of November. We are teaming up with Birds Connect Seattle to host an info session for both new and returning volunteers on Wednesday, July 2nd from 6:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. PST. Even if you have previously participated in Project Phoenix, we need you to register again this year. This helps us keep track of volunteer engagement and fine-tune our programming based on collective volunteer interests and previous birding experience. After you sign up, you will receive a confirmation email with more information about how to get started. If you have any questions, please reach out to me any time.

***Finally, a quick note to all the amazing eBird reviewers out there: Our team recognizes that by generating hundreds of additional eBird checklists, our program adds to the workload of local reviewers. We greatly appreciate all of the time and energy you invest in reviewing local checklists � our research is strengthened by your efforts. Although we work very hard to ensure that our volunteers are collecting high quality data (and we provide many resources and opportunities to support beginner birders), we do recognize that our volunteers sometimes make mistakes or rely too heavily on apps like Merlin Bird ID. If there are any common species identification errors you would like us to address among our volunteers or messages/tips and tricks you would like to pass on, please do reach out. I collaborated directly with eBird reviewers while running the COVID-19 lockdown birding study in Seattle, and that was enormously helpful.***

Wishing you all safe and happy birding this summer! Thank you for all you do for our feathered friends. 🙂

***

Olivia V. Sanderfoot, Ph.D.
Postdoctoral Researcher
Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County

Research Associate
La Kretz Center for California Conservation Science
Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology
University of California, Los Angeles

Email: osanderfoot@nhm.org
Website:  https://ovsanderfoot.com/
Social: @osanderfoot
Phone: 608-692-4460

2023 Top 100 Audubon Photos | Trish Oster’s Peregrines

June 28, 2025

[Posted by Chuck Almdale]

Link to 2023 National Audubon Society winners.
The best 100 of almost 9,000 entries.
Clear, sharp, well-framed, interesting, unusual views, unusual behaviors, unusual angles.

Among the 100 top photos is #82 by Trish Oster, local bird photographer who occasionally joins us on our Malibu Lagoon bird walks. I had the chance to talk to her recently and she sent me a copy of this and a few other photos I’ll be posting in the near future. I had to reduce it in file size from 3329 Kb to 570 Kb to get it onto our site, so there probably is a slight degradation in quality and it’s not as large as on the NAS site.

Trish says:
This is my photo that made it into the 2023 Audubon Top 100. It is of 2 juvenile Peregrine Falcons. They had just fledged and the bird on the left was flapping its wings and kept hitting its sibling in the head, which perturbed the youngster as you can see its expression in the photo!

This particular female (Maxine)  is around 10 years old now.  
She arrived quite a few years ago and killed the resident female. We do not know where she came from. 

The father to these chicks was banded 02Z, and nicknamed “two zee,” locally spelled “Tuzee.” If I remember correctly, I believe his tag indicated he was from the Portland Oregon area and he was around 13 years old. My photo is from June 2023.

“Tuzee,” Maxine’s mate in 2023. You can see 02Z on his ankle bracelet.

02Z disappeared last year while the 2 new chicks had just gotten old enough to fly around a little. He never returned and was determined to have died. There have also been reports that he was found dead and had been attacked and killed.

Maxine raised the two chicks all by herself. Catching prey and feeding them and fending off attacks from male Peregrines trying to take over and kill the chicks. The two chicks fledged successfully.

The NAS website has the following photo information:

Category: Amateur
Location: Point Fermin, San Pedro, California
Camera: Canon EOS R6 with a Canon RF100-500mm f/4.5-7.1 L IS USM lens;
1/2000 second at f/7.1; ISO 5000>
Behind the Shot: I took this photo when three Peregrine Falcon fledglings I watched were still working on their flight skills. The young falcon on the left stretched and flapped its wings, getting the courage up to take flight. The morning was overcast, which I prefer for photography, as I feel it creates a softer look to my photos. I upped my shutter speed a little higher to compensate for the wing movement and in expectation for the suspected takeoff. (Which happened two frames later!) When I snapped the photo, the falcon on the right looked straight at me. I often wonder how these fledglings are faring. Getting the opportunity to photograph them was a magical experience.

No June Gloom at Malibu Lagoon, 22 June 2025

June 25, 2025
Nature’s own self-guided missile (Chris Tosdevin 6-22-25)

[By Chuck Almdale; Photos by Ray Juncosa & Chris Tosdevin]

It wasn’t the first bird of the day, but whenever a Peregrine Falcon comes rocketing across the lagoon towards the shorebirds and ducks, it’s an event. There wasn’t a lot of potential prey that looked interesting, I suppose, as after that brief pass, the bird continued past Malibu Pier and on down the coast.

Peregrine Falcon (Chris Tosdevin 6-22-25). The seemingly-darker portion of the hood (or moustache) is an artifact of lighting as it’s shaded by the wing, thus looking darker than the rest of the hood.

As always when looking sunward, the plumage colors were indistinct and gray, and I could not see the dark hood at all, nevertheless the size and bulk cried Peregrine. After seeing Chris’s photos which show the dark hood far more clearly, I decided that of the three Peregrine subspecies – anatum (Continental), pealei (Peale’s) and tundrius (Tundra), pealei was the most likely, based on the width of the dark moustachial mark, the small pale auricular area behind it and the overall darkness and streaking of the plumage. Pealei breeds from the Olympic Penn. up through the Aleutians.

Since Dec. 24, 2000, we’ve seen 43 Peregrines in 40 sightings at the lagoon (we’ve had a pair of them three times, most recently Apr 28, 2019), and overall they show up on 15% of our visits since the beginning of 2010 (no visits at all for 1979-1999). This is surprisingly frequent it seems to me, but then again, if they’re here they will be seen, as they don’t hide in the bushes like Lincoln’s Sparrows.

The above screen-snip from my lagoon spreadsheet shows the record for visiting falcons: Peregrines have appeared every month except August, only one previously in June. Not a lot of Prairie Falcon visits as you can see.

In terms of species variety and sheer numbers (or lack thereof), “June is the cruelest month” for birders in SoCal. Words to live by. Of our mere 42 species today, many were lagoon locale breeding birds. Others bred nearby, such as Brown Pelicans on the Channel Islands. Killdeer nest on the sandy “dunes,” Hooded Oriole in the trees, especially palms, Bushtits in the trees or brush, Song Sparrows in the brush, Common Yellowthroat in the reeds or brush, Canada Geese on the sandy islands where the Mallard and Gadwall probably nest as well (they’re better at hiding than the long-necked geese).

All grebe species stay near water. As with loons, their legs are located far back on their torsos (their family name Podicipedidae means “rump-foot”) and they really can’t walk on land but only drag their body and lurch, so they build their nests in water on a mound of mud, reeds, and vegetation. At the lagoon we normally can’t see their nests (assuming they’re even there!) as they’re well-hidden in the reeds, but all the reeds have fallen over, possibly due to the very high lagoon water, and this grebe’s nest was revealed to all.

Pied-billed Grebes swimming and nesting (Chris Tosdevin 6-22-25). Two different birds, possibly mates.

Canada Geese nested again at the lagoon for what looks like the 6th year in a row, always on the sandy brushy islands, one pair with three young (remaining) this year. The young are still slightly smaller than the adults and their plumage is still a bit scraggly.

Canada Goose family (Chris Tosdevin 6-22-25)
Canada Goose scraggly young (Chris Tosdevin 6-22-25)

I don’t know where the Black Phoebes nest. In my limited experience, they seem to prefer nesting over front-door porch lights. As they’re here 98% of the time, they’re nesting somewhere nearby.

Black Phoebe (Chris Tosdevin 6-22-25)

It’s possible this Killdeer was born a few months ago. It looks very slender to me and the lower black breast-band was quite irregular.

A slender Killdeer (Chris Tosdevin 6-22-25)

Either this Willet was already finished with nesting (NE Calif. to Minnesota to southern Canadian plains) or didn’t bother to go, as it is quite well-marked on the breast. They’re here year-round , 88% of all visits, but least common May-July.

Willet inspects the timber (Chris Tosdevin 6-22-25)

This young Brown Pelican was unfortunately quite well-oiled on the breast. Something, somewhere, is leaking.

Oiled young Brown Pelican (Chris Tosdevin 6-22-25)

The Pelican Pair’s Odyssey

It began with the pair trailing a Double-Crested Cormorant. Perhaps it’ll find a fish they can steal?

But then a stick is discovered and the cormorant forgotten. (Ray Juncosa 6-22-25)

One stick, two young pelicans, a recipe for trouble. It begins to draw attention.

Simply irresistible! Gimme that! (Ray Juncosa 6-22-25)

It begins to get a bit boisterous and mom or dad moves in.

The stick almost escapes! (Ray Juncosa 6-22-25)

But mom, or dad, snags it…

…and swims away with it. Fun time’s over. (Ray Juncosa 6-22-25)

Sometimes mother Gadwall had nine ducklings, sometimes eleven, sometimes twelve.

Gadwall mom with 11 ducklings (Ray Juncosa 6-22-25)

We don’t have any photos, but we were all surprised to see Ruddy Ducks. Sometimes there were one, sometimes three, one of us thought four. I promised I’d look up June lagoon records for them.
Year-round for 12/1/79 – 6/22/25: 2,967 birds on 164 occasions.
June only: 16 birds total on 3 occasions, July only: 6 birds total on 3 occasions
November: 622 birds total on 26 occasions, December: 583 birds total on 27 occasions.
Present mostly Oct – March. Presence year-round 1/1/10 – present: 56%
So…we were right, Ruddys are rarely here in June. Prior sightings were 7 birds on 6/27/10 and 6 on 6/24/07.

We didn’t have a lot of gulls, only 102. Here’s three of the four species. The Heermann’s Gulls, like the adult below, have returned in small numbers from their nesting grounds on Isla Rasa in the Sea of Cortez.

Gulls L-R: Heermann’s, California, Ring-billed (Chris Tosdevin 6-22-25)

The Caspian Tern Hydroprogne caspia is the largest tern in the world and has a “sub-cosmopolitan” distribution. It was first collected in 1770 near the Caspian Sea, adjacent to its largest breeding area, and described by Peter Simon Pallas. Pallas seems to have specialized in this region as Pallas’ Gull and Pallas’ Sandgrouse, obviously named for him, also nest adjacent to the Caspian Sea. Caspian Terns also nest in several locations in northern California and regularly visit the lagoon in small numbers. To date we’ve seen 1,168 birds on 155 visits, or 47% of visits. Presence is primarily March-August, peaking in April. The blood-red bill, usually with a dark tip, the dark cap and large size give it away.

Caspian Tern (Chris Tosdevin 6-22-25)

Caspian Tern range: Orange: breeding; Yellow: migration; Purple: year round; Blue: non-breeding (wintering). Wikipedia

Oh no, we’ve reached the end, in recognition of which is this semi-snoozing waterfowl. What is it and why?

Our first entry for the upcoming Field Guide to Bird Vents (Chris Tosdevin 6-22-25)

I wanted to mention the water level again. The lagoon outflow channel to the sea has silted in, and the lagoon water was quite high, higher than actual sea level which was at high tide at 8:24 am, and possibly higher than I’ve ever seen it before. The railing around the summer clock sidewalk barely emerged from the water, just like in last month’s photo.

Inundated summer clock sidewalk (Lillian Johnson 5-25-25)

According to the designers, for every inch of water level rise in the lagoon, the water moves four feet up the sidewalk. Tiles (see below) spaced along the sidewalk below the metal railing tell you the water height. Last month the water’s edge was a couple of feet to the right of this marker below. This month the marker was under 2″ of water. As the lagoon is closed to the ocean, this is lagoon water level only, fed solely by water coming down the creek; the level of the sea has almost nothing to do with it.

Lagoon water height marker 8′ 3.6″ (Lillian Johnson 5-25-25)

Not every lagoon in the world can claim to have it’s own water level marking system.

Malibu Lagoon on eBird as of 6-23-25: 8632 lists, 2768 eBirders, 321 species
Most recent new species seen: Nelson’s Sparrow, 11/29/24 by Femi Faminu (SMBAS member). When the newest species added to the list was seen on a date prior to the most recently seen new species, there is no way I can find to easily determine what that bird is. Another minor nit to pick about eBird.

Birds new for the season: Brant, Willet, Heermann’s Gull, Black-crowned Night Heron, Peregrine Falcon. “New for the season” means it has been three or more months since last recorded on our trips.

Many, many thanks to photographers Ray Juncosa & Chris Tosdevin.

Upcoming SMBAS scheduled field trips; no reservations or Covid card necessary unless specifically mentioned:

  • Malibu Lagoon, Sun. July 27, 8:30 (adults) & 10 am (parents & kids)
  • Lower Los Angeles River, Sat. Aug 9, 7am (to beat the heat) reservations
  • Malibu Lagoon, Sun. August 24, 8:30 (adults) & 10 am (parents & kids)
  • These and any other trips we announce for the foreseeable future will depend upon expected status of the Covid/flu/etc. pandemic, not to mention landslides, at trip time. Any trip announced may be canceled shortly before trip date if it seems necessary. By now any other comments should be superfluous.
  • Link to Programs & Field Trip schedule.

The next SMBAS Zoom program: October 7, to be announced.

The SMBAS 10 a.m. Parent’s & Kids Birdwalk has again resumed. Reservations not necessary for families, but for groups (scouts, etc.), call Jean (213-522-0062).

Links: Unusual birds at Malibu Lagoon
9/23/02 Aerial photo of Malibu Lagoon
More recent aerial photo

Prior checklists:
2025: Jan-June
2023: Jan-June, July-Dec 2024: Jan-June, July-Dec
2021: Jan-JulyJuly-Dec2022: Jan-June, July-Dec
2020: Jan-JulyJuly-Dec  2019: Jan-June, July-Dec  
2018: Jan-June, July-Dec  2017: Jan-June, July-Dec
2016: Jan-June, July-Dec  2015: Jan-May, July-Dec
2014: Jan-July,  July-Dec  2013: Jan-June, July-Dec
2012: Jan-June, July-Dec 2011: Jan-June, July-Dec
2010: Jan-June, July-Dec  2009: Jan-June, July-Dec

The 10-year comparison summaries created during the Lagoon Reconfiguration Project period, remain available—despite numerous complaints—on our Lagoon Project Bird Census Page. Very briefly summarized, the results unexpectedly indicate that avian species diversification and numbers improved slightly during the restoration period June’12-June’14.

Many thanks to Marie Barnidge-McIntyre & Chris Tosdevin for contributions made to this month’s census counts.

The species list below was re-sequenced as of 12/31/24 to agree with the California Bird Records Committee Official California Checklist. If part of the right side of the chart below is hidden, there’s a slider button inconveniently located at the bottom end of the list. The numbers 1-9 left of the species names are keyed to the nine categories of birds at the bottom. Updated lagoon bird check lists can be downloaded here.
[Chuck Almdale]

Malibu Census 20251/302/233/234/275/256/22
Temperature57-5957-7054-6456-6463-6866-73
Tide Lo/Hi HeightH+6.14H+4.79H+4.15H+4.29H+3.78H+3.31
 Tide Time091305260433095709090824
1Brant (Black)     1
1Canada Goose 22815
1Cinnamon Teal 56   
1Northern Shoveler6     
1Gadwall89935102425
1Mallard22622212620
1Green-winged Teal5166   
1Lesser Scaup2     
1Surf Scoter 156   
1Bufflehead23     
1Red-breasted Merganser12831  
1Ruddy Duck3717111043
2Pied-billed Grebe478444
2Eared Grebe1     
2Western Grebe3430302542
7Feral Pigeon65 165
7Mourning Dove  1221
8Anna’s Hummingbird 33311
8Allen’s Hummingbird156522
2American Coot79745551141
5Black-bellied Plover3030    
5Killdeer244325
5Semipalmated Plover   2  
5Snowy Plover223   
5Whimbrel8583  
5Marbled Godwit328   
5Ruddy Turnstone24    
5Sanderling22     
5Dunlin  1   
5Least Sandpiper71451  
5Western Sandpiper 1634   
5Spotted Sandpiper111   
5Willet15810  1
5Greater Yellowlegs  2   
6Heermann’s Gull71   13
6Ring-billed Gull12126235
6Western Gull905520207079
6California Gull57510512825
6American Herring Gull121   
6Glaucous-winged Gull 31   
6Caspian Tern  11264
6Royal Tern 510   
6Elegant Tern  2   
2Red-throated Loon 1    
2Pacific Loon1 11  
2Common Loon 410   
2Brandt’s Cormorant71512  
2Pelagic Cormorant 2 1  
2Double-crested Cormorant55252525718
2American White Pelican  5   
2Brown Pelican232920025157138
3Snowy Egret565121
3Black-crowned Night-Heron  1  4
3Great Egret122113
3Western Cattle-Egret   1  
3Great Blue Heron1 2119
4Turkey Vulture   2  
4Osprey 2111 
4Cooper’s Hawk 11   
4Bald Eagle 1    
4Red-shouldered Hawk    1 
4Red-tailed Hawk 1111 
8Belted Kingfisher 11   
8Nuttall’s Woodpecker 1    
4Peregrine Falcon     1
8Nanday Parakeet 4 22 
9Cassin’s Kingbird  111 
9Black Phoebe133122
9Say’s Phoebe 1    
9California Scrub-Jay1 1 1 
9American Crow9266566
9Common Raven 2921 
9Oak Titmouse  1   
9Tree Swallow  5 1 
9Violet-green Swallow   5  
9No. Rough-winged Swallow  172071
9Barn Swallow  10201822
9Cliff Swallow  372424
9Bushtit45252312
9Wrentit114222
9Ruby-crowned Kinglet11    
9Blue-gray Gnatcatcher 1    
9Bewick’s Wren1     
9Northern Mockingbird 1  1 
9European Starling 11010106
9Western Bluebird 1    
9House Finch89261554
9Lesser Goldfinch 104 22
9Dark-eyed Junco 111 2
9White-crowned Sparrow8751  
9Song Sparrow12810865
9California Towhee233321
9Spotted Towhee  112 
9Hooded Oriole   111
9Brown-headed Cowbird   2  
9Great-tailed Grackle  2368
9Orange-crowned Warbler11312 
9Common Yellowthroat2264 5
9Yellow-rumped Warbler683   
9Wilson’s Warbler  1   
Totals Birds by TypeJanFebMarAprMayJun
1Waterfowl1967891505554
2Water Birds – Other922144339104176163
3Herons, Egrets & Ibis78104417
4Quail & Raptors053431
5Shorebirds928676926
6Gulls & Terns6851835226161106
7Doves651386
8Other Non-Passerines114101053
9Passerines5792160115103103
 Totals Birds1966615742325517459
        
 Total Species by GroupJanFebMarAprMayJun
1Waterfowl888545
2Water Birds – Other899855
3Herons, Egrets & Ibis324434
4Quail & Raptors043331
5Shorebirds101010412
6Gulls & Terns578445
7Doves111222
8Other Non-Passerines153332
9Passerines142025222116
Totals Species – 100506671554642