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A Summer of Heron Love Draws to a Close

September 12, 2014

Cormorants

EgretInSpringPHOTO RECAP – Part One

GRAB YOUR LATTE AND LOOK UP: The next time you pull into the parking lot of Starbuck’s across PCH from Malibu State Beach between April and September, cast your eyes to the adjacent trees. You are looking at a Heron and Cormorant Rookery that has been in this exact spot for at least 50 years. Herons here include Great Egrets, Snowy Egrets, Black Crowned Night Herons and Great Blue Herons.

EgretNest

Beginning around April, males arrive at the rookery to claim or build huge nests in the tree tops and flaunt the magnificent breeding plumage that once saw them to the brink of extinction for use in hats, (and incidentally led to the creation of the Audubon Society to protect them.)

The females arrive soon after, and courtship begins (and she does most of the work finishing the nest). Once mates are chosen, pair bonding follows.

EgretCourting

Mating occurs in the nest.

EgretsMating

And approximately three to four weeks later…

Parent&Child

Across PCH at Malibu Lagoon, Heron parents forage food for their chicks, as Killdeer and other fledglings begin to appear.

KilldeerChick

Black Crown Night Heron chicks nest in trees next to the Egrets. The chicks are seriously noisy as they try out their wings.

HeronWingTest

In the Photo Recap Part II the chicks learn to fly, forage and fly off into the world.

Laurel Hoctor Jones

Education Chair

Lower Los Angeles River Trip Report: 6 September, 2014

September 8, 2014

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Fiery Skippers female & male  (J. Waterman 9/6/14)

Fiery Skippers female & male, warming their exoskeletons
(J. Waterman 9/6/14)

7:30am was not too early to begin our fifth annual walk along the banks of the lower Los Angeles River. We began at Willow St, about 3 miles north of Long Beach Harbor, ending about 6 miles farther north at Alondra Blvd. We usually visit 4 sites, but this year we skipped DeForest Park as our leader, Dick Barth, had visited the park earlier and found no warblers or other passerines at all in the trees. It was slightly overcast and about 70° when we started, clearing up and topping out about 88° when we finished at 12:15.

Birds & vegetation at Willow St. (C. Almdale 9/6/14)

Birds & vegetation at Willow St. (C. Almdale 9/6/14)

The most vegetation in this section of river channel is at Willow St., with sand and mud islands, floating rafts of water plants, wading egrets, ducks, and large flocks of shorebirds, gulls, the occasional tern, plus a few raptors and plenty of Barn Swallows and Rock Pigeons. The Orange Bishop can usually be found in the tall riverbed island grass in this area.

Orange Bishop at Willow St (J. Waterman 9/6/14)

Male Orange Bishop at Willow St (J. Waterman 9/6/14)

Just as we had finished checking out some Greater Yellowlegs, a pair of less-common Lesser Yellowlegs flew in, providing an opportunity to compare the two. Most of the difference noted was the size and shape of the bill: shorter and straighter in the Lesser. What we momentarily thought might be a Virginia Rail turned out to be a juvenile Common Gallinule (recently split from its Eurasian congener and renamed from Common Moorhen).

Avocets & Dowitchers in flight (J. Waterman 9/6/14)

Avocets & Dowitchers in flight (J. Waterman 9/6/14)

Among the numerous Long-billed Dowitchers we found a few Short-billed. At 34th St., our second stop, we found a few juvenile Short-billed in very fresh plumage, allowing us to check out the orange “tiger stripes” in their tertials. We hunted through the numerous mixed flocks of Least and Western Sandpipers for rarities, finally finding a single Pectoral Sandpiper, skulking in the brush and grass on a small island. For at least 20 minutes we entertained ourselves with persistent comments such as: “it’s head is poking out between those two stilts”; “which stilts?”; “the two on that little island”; “now the grass is moving to the left of the left stilt, watch that spot”; “now it’s under the rear end of the right stilt” and so on. Finally the bird walked out into the open water and we all got great looks.

Pectoral Sandpiper at Willow St.  (J. Waterman 9/6/14)

Pectoral Sandpiper at Willow St. (J. Waterman 9/6/14)

Gulls – mostly Western – continued to gather here, but we had to leave before the Laughing Gull, a local resident throughout the summer, arrived. We went north to 34th St. where we didn’t see anything new except a few juvenile Short-billed Dowitchers in very fresh plumage, allowing us to check out the orange “tiger stripes” in their tertials. We then went on to Alondra Blvd., next to the Home Depot. House Sparrows have found a fine foraging spot here, gleaning orts and pieces of bread from the ground around the groups of workers waiting for daily work.

Red-Necked Phalarope at Alondra Blvd.  (J. Waterman 9/6/14)

Red-Necked Phalarope at Alondra Blvd. (J. Waterman 9/6/14)

Another large gull flock was here, as well as many Least and Western Sandpipers flocks, through which spun a single Red-necked Phalarope. It didn’t so much spin – as they typically do in deeper water to create a vortex which lifts food to where they can snag it – as twisted in ankle-deep water. This looked a bit odd.
A very special thanks to Richard Barth who frequently birds this area. His knowledge and enthusiastic explanations of difficult plumages are invaluable, especially during migration season! I’m sure his upcoming program at Los Angeles Audubon this Wednesday, September 10, will be great.  [Chuck Almdale]

Prior Reports: August 2013September 2012September 2011October 2010

Lower L.A. River 9/6/14 Willow 34th Alondra Total
Species Street Street Blvd. Birds
Gadwall 2 2
Mallard 110 16 15 141
Cinnamon Teal 5 9 14
Northern Shoveler 8 8
Bufflehead 1 1
Pied-billed Grebe 1 1
Double-crested Cormorant 6 6
Great Blue Heron 2 2
Great Egret 2 2
Snowy Egret 5 5
Green Heron 1 1
Black-crowned Night-Heron 2 2
Turkey Vulture 3 1 4
Osprey 1 1
Common Gallinule 1 1
American Coot 25 25
Semipalmated Plover 2 2
Killdeer 65 1 66
Black-necked Stilt 425 120 545
American Avocet 160 12 172
Spotted Sandpiper 14 14
Greater Yellowlegs 4 4
Willet 1 1
Lesser Yellowlegs 2 2
Western Sandpiper 100 125 225
Least Sandpiper 490 340 830
Pectoral Sandpiper 1 1
Short-billed Dowitcher 30 10 40
Long-billed Dowitcher 200 70 270
Red-necked Phalarope 1 1
Ring-billed Gull 20 5 25
Western Gull 100 280 380
California Gull 50 50
Caspian Tern 2 2
Rock Pigeon 130 110 240
Eurasian Collared-Dove 3 3
White-throated Swift 6 6
Allen’s Hummingbird 2 2
American Kestrel 2 2
Yellow-chevroned Parakeet 7 7
Black Phoebe 2 2
American Crow 6 6
Barn Swallow 45 15 12 72
European Starling 40 40
Savannah Sparrow 1 1
Red-winged Blackbird 20 20
Yellow-headed Blackbird 1 1
Great-tailed Grackle 3 3
House Finch 12 12
House Sparrow 12 12
Orange Bishop 1 1
 Total Species & Birds – 51 48 9 10 3276

Full Harvest Moon Update: 8 September 8, 2014, 6:38 P.M. PDT

September 7, 2014
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Here’s another update from SMBAS Blog on that large, disc-like, shining object which has frequently and mysteriously appeared in our nighttime sky this year (known to many as the moon).

harvest-moon-deer-ireland_Anthony Lynch_9-19-13

Irish harvest moon & deer (Anthony Lynch 9/19/13 from Space.com)

Sept. 8, 6:38 p.m. PDT — Full Harvest Moon.  Traditionally, this designation goes to the full moon that occurs closest to the Autumnal (Fall) Equinox.  This year’s version comes unusually early. At the peak of the harvest, farmers can work into the night by the light of this moon. Usually the moon rises an average of 50 minutes later each night, but for the few nights around the Harvest Moon, the moon seems to rise at nearly the same time each night: just 25 to 30 minutes later across the U.S., and only 10 to 20 minutes later for much of Canada and Europe.   Corn, pumpkins, squash, beans and wild rice — the chief Indian staples — are now ready for gathering.

Interesting & useful factoids on moon averages:
Apparent width of the moon (full or otherwise):  1 /2 degree.
Time one full moon to next full moon:  29.5 days
Angle moon moves in 24 hours:  12.2 degrees
Time for moon to move it’s own width (1/2 degree):  59 minutes
Thus, on average, the moon takes just under an hour to move it’s own width. When trying to estimate the size of something, compare it to the moon, a known quantity.

MoonPhases.info – A handy site for a googolplex of moon facts.

The next significant full moon will occur on October 8, 3:51 a.m. PDT.   Keep an eye on this spot for additional late-breaking news on this unprecedented event.

This information comes to you courtesy of: http://www.space.com/24262-weird-full-moon-names-2014-explained.html
written by Joe Rao.   Joe Rao serves as an instructor and guest lecturer at New York’s Hayden Planetarium. He writes about astronomy for Natural History magazine, the Farmer’s Almanac and other publications, and he is also an on-camera meteorologist for News 12 Westchester, N.Y.

But that’s waaay too long to type in, and besides, you don’t need to go there because SMBAS has done the work for you!
[Chuck Almdale]

A (whispered) warning…

August 31, 2014
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Passenger_Pigeon_(Columba_Migratoria) [By Toronto Public Library [CC-BY-SA-2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons]

Passenger_Pigeon_(Columba_Migratoria) [By Toronto Public Library [CC-BY-SA-2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0)%5D, via Wikimedia Commons]

If you saw the Sunday NY Times article today, you’ve seen that a major study on the effects of climate change on North American bird populations is about to be released. National Audubon’s scientists have been working on this for a couple of years and it is a a study that uses a large number of long-established data collections in creating a GIS-based model that projects the areas, odds, and probabilities of survival of a large number of species. There are a number of major surprises in this study. Look for headlines in your paper and on the web in the next two weeks!

If you can’t wait, go to:  http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/31/opinion/sunday/saving-our-birds.html
If that doesn’t work, try HERE.

LucienP

Quick! I don’t know how long this offer lasts

August 31, 2014
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The developers who promote, polish and prepare the Audubon Apps for those who have smart phones, iPads, and other such devices, are having a Labor Day weekend sale at 99cents per app. these are not “the definitive” bird app nor The Illustrator’s best. They are very good, recent, photo-illustrated apps. Much better than the last edition extant of the Audubon (photo-illustrated) book versions. I like them better than iBird Pro. In addition, I’ve found they have a good library of sound recordings, especially since they welcome additions from the public. So, you’ve already paid $15-$30 for the Sibley and/or the NationalGeo apps, but this is definitely worth the price for the very specific California Birds, the Trees, the Butterflies…how about the Flowers? Spoil yourself to all four! We’ll compare notes in the field!

Use this link: (copy and paste in your browser)

http://links.greenmountain.mkt4800.com/servlet/MailView?ms=OTM0NDQ1NgS2&r=MTczNTk5MDMwMDcS1&j=MzYyODIwNDg0S0&mt=1&rt=0

LucienP