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No salesman will call, at least not from us. Maybe from someone else.
It’s a labyrinthine path one weaves to get to the Ornithology Dept.; fortunately, Collections Manager Kimball Garrett met us at the temporary Museum entrance so we had no problem. Once there, Kimball led us on a several-hour tour throughout his domain.

Specimens lined up like lollipops
The bird skins are housed in a cool room, nestled into numerous 12-ft. high cabinets at least 20 ft. long which rest on tracks. By spinning a crank they slide back and forth, making room to get at their drawers. (Storage space is tight). Each of the hundreds – or thousands – of drawers are laden with bird skins, most of them stuffed plump with cotton.They look like feathered lollipops as most have a stick poking out their rear end. We looked at some woodpecker skins: Yellow-bellied and Red-naped Sapsuckers, Imperial and Ivory-billed, which is probably the only way anyone will ever see this last bird. Trays filled with painfully identical woodcreepers (a neotropical family of horrifically similar species) reminded me of why I start to panic whenever I see the living birds clambering up tree trunks in the rainforest. The drawers of manakins surprised those who had seen these neotropical lekking males on TV, disco-dancing and moonwalking to attract females; these tiny birds are only 3 to 6 inches long.
Kimball says that they have some some 115,000 specimens representing some
Collections Manager Kimball Garrett
5,000 species which is about 50% of the world’s bird species. of the world’s bird species. A specimen may consist of any or all of: skin – either flat or stuffed, skeleton, mounted for display, stomach contents, or pickled in a jar. Everything is cross-referenced and tagged, often with multiple tags. Many skins are over 100 years old and it’s interesting to see how often the scientific name changes over the decades, the results of research and new information forcing changes in taxonomy and nomenclature. Tags gradually become illegible when the ink fades or the tag slowly absorbs oil from the feathers; additional tags are then added to duplicate and – in many cases – update the information. The skins must also periodically be chilled to -30°F. to kill insect larva or eggs which are a continuing problem in all such collections.
Two cases near the entrance contain specimens used for current research. When someone is studying primary feather length or tarsus length in a particular species or cross-section of species, the items are stored here rather than laboriously and repetitively returned to their permanent locations. Among current projects is one the Dept’s curator, Dr. Kenneth Campbell, is doing on wild turkey legs, trying in part to determine whether the turkeys snared in the La Brea Tar Pits is the sane wild turkey species common in the U.S., the Ocellated Turkey of Central America, or yet another, now extinct, species.
Five volunteers, seated around a large table, were busily gutting and skinning birds. Scrape, scrape, scrape, off goes the fat from the inside of the skin. Finely ground corn husk flour is close at hand to soak up the – uh – liquids. Properly preparing a skin can take a couple of days. Nearby are large work/sinks with hoods overhead to capture fumes when specimens are unpickled.
Another storeroom is filled with shelves and boxes of bones. All the bones of any particular specimen go into their own box which can be smaller than a jeweler’s ring box for, say, a hummingbird, or twice the size of a shoe box for a heron. In theory, each bone gets the official specimen number; in practice, many bones are simply too small, and only the skull, sternum and pelvis may be numbered.
Two hours whizzed by: Kimball was lunch-hungry, so he led us back down Ariadne’s string to the entrance. We had seen and learned a lot: much work involved in maintaining a collection of this size, volunteers are integral and important in these days of budget crises, most of any collection’s specimens are never publicly displayed but are intended and used for research, researchers are constantly using the world’s bird collections, without the intentional creation of these collections we would know very little about birds, most of the specimens now coming into the museum are the result of accidental kills discovered by the general public or from deaths at zoos or rehabilitation facilities.
Many thanks to Kimball Garrett and the assorted volunteers at the collection for showing us around and putting up with our questions.
The museum’s website is at: http://www.nhm.org/site/
Phone: (213)-744-3466.
Admission – Adults: $9, Seniors & students: $6.50, Children 5-12: $2, Children under 5: free.
You can sign your group up for a behind-the-scenes tour through the Ornithology Department’s website at:
http://www.nhm.org/site/research-collections/ornithology
If anyone is interested in bird collecting and bird collections historical or recent, I can recommend these two books:
The Bird Collectors by Barbara and Richard Mearns is a history of the great collections and the explorers who did the hard, dirty, dangerous and occasionally fatal work.
A Parrot Without a Name by Don Stap describes a 1980’s collecting trip to the Amazon rainforest. Its chapter on Ted Parker, perhaps the most uniquely talented birder/ornithologist/bird song collector ever, will boggle your mind.
On a final note, the IMAX theater at the museum, next to the Science Center, typically has three concurrent IMAX 3-D movies. Some of us saw Hubble3D, about the 2009 repairs to the telescope by the Space Shuttle team, with some history thrown in. It was excellent and the 3-D was as good or better than Avatar. Seniors get a discount: $6 for one film, $9.75 for two. Information: (213)-744-2012
Website Moving – URL and Email changes
Dear Members and Friends;
The physical location of our website is changing. As of 3/31/2010 AT&T will no longer host personal web sites so we are dropping all connections with AT&T, including some chapter email addresses.
Therefore, please change your email address book as follows:
- smbas@att.net should be replaced with smbas@verizon.net
- cgbraggjr@att.net should be replaced with braggjr67@verizon.net
Our web domain is not changing: it is still <smbas.org>. However, if you have bookmarked the site in your browser, you may have used the physical location <http://cgbraggjr.home.att.net/>. On March 31st the physical location will change so that address will not work. <smbas.org> is like a cell phone number – no matter where you are, your cell number will reach you. So, please change your bookmark to <smbas.org>. If your software refuses to use the short version, you can also use <http://smbas.org>.
Field Trip Report: King Gillette Ranch, 13 March 2010
If your winter was one of discontent, fear not, for springtime is icumen in, glaidly sing coucou.
The trees are beginning to leaf and flower, the bees are up and about their business, and the birds just wanna dance and sing, they know not why. I don’t think any of us ever did spot any of the House Wrens, but their singing was always within earshot. A California Thrasher had selected the small parking as part of his territory and he was busily burbling and chortling whenever we sauntered past, trailing our fearless leader.
A female Phainopepla was in the same area, indicating that they are beginning to move from the deserts to the coast for their 2nd breeding season.
The day quickly warmed after a chilly start and we took our time wandering around the native planting area, sorting out a Northern Mockingbird’s songs from his thrasher cousin, House Finch songs from possible Purples, and Lesser Goldfinch plaintiveness from the slightly less mournful American Goldfinch. California Quail called in the distance as we wandered through fields of sage and grass.
After finding only Mallards on the small pond, we checked out the large sycamores at the west end of the large ranch house and among the many busy Acorn Woodpeckers we found a solitary Lewis’s Woodpecker, previously reported on the LA County Birding Hot Line. Compared to his Melanerpes congener, he is almost crowlike – larger and darker, lacking all the Acorn’s patches of white plumage. He seemed intent on driving away all of the Acorns – a hopeless ambition – leaving him barely any time to hawk insects from the treetops between his swoops and lunges at the other woodpeckers. This is a relatively good winter for Lewis’s in SoCal. They are an irruptive wintering species and some years there are few or none around.
Onwards into the woods, Oak Titmice were singing everywhere, Ruby-crowned Kinglets were busily gleaning and the occasional Yellow-rumped Warbler in winter plumage was still present. A large flock of Band-tailed Pigeons startled us, suddenly flushing from a large sycamore when we got too close for their comfort. On the margins of the fields, Western Bluebirds were a common sight, flycatching from the trees and fence posts. Several of our group were busily taking photos at every opportunity: some of their results follow. If you are on the website, double-click the image to make it larger and see additional (if any) information.
- Fearless Leader Lu Plauzoles
- California Thrasher – between songs (J.Kenney 3/13/10 King Gillette)
- Northern Mockingbird (J.Kenney 3/13/10)
- Phainopepla female (L.Johnson 3/13/10 King Gillette)
- Lesser Goldfinch male molting into breeding plumage (J.Kenney 3/13/10)
- Acorn Woodpecker. King Gillette Ranch (J.Kenney 3/13/10)
- Lewis’s Woodpecker – resting from his pursuits (J.Kenney 3/13/10 King Gillette)
- White-breasted Nuthatch (J.Kenney 3/13/10)
- American Robin still molting into breeding plumage (J.Kenney 3/13/10)
- Anna’s Hummingbird male (J.Kenney 3/13/10)
- European Starling – noted cavity nester (J.Kenney 3/13/10)
- Red-tailed Hawk (J.Kenney 3/13/10)
- Red-shouldered Hawk soaring (J.Kenney 3/13/10 King Gillette)
- Ground Squirrel (J.Kenney 3/13/10)
Trip List – 44 Species (H – heard only)
| Mallard | 15 |
| California Quail | H |
| Great Blue Heron | 2 |
| Black-crowned Night-Heron | 1 |
| Turkey Vulture | 4 |
| Cooper’s Hawk | 2 |
| Red-shouldered Hawk | 2 |
| Red-tailed Hawk | 4 |
| Rock Pigeon | 12 |
| Band-tailed Pigeon | 30 |
| Mourning Dove | 20 |
| Anna’s Hummingbird | 8 |
| Allen’s Hummingbird | 2 |
| Lewis’s Woodpecker | 1 |
| Acorn Woodpecker | 25 |
| Nuttall’s Woodpecker | 1 |
| Northern Flicker | 1 |
| Black Phoebe | 25 |
| Cassin’s Kingbird | 1 |
| Western Scrub-Jay | 2 |
| American Crow | 20 |
| Common Raven | 4 |
| No. Rough-winged Swallow | 1 |
| Violet-green Swallow | 1 |
| Bushtit | 10 |
| White-breasted Nuthatch | 4 |
| House Wren | 8H |
| Ruby-crowned Kinglet | 12 |
| Western Bluebird | 12 |
| American Robin | 2 |
| Wrentit | 4H |
| Northern Mockingbird | 4 |
| California Thrasher | 2 |
| European Starling | 20 |
| Orange-crowned Warbler | 2 |
| Yellow-rumped Warbler | 10 |
| Spotted Towhee | 4 |
| California Towhee | 6 |
| Song Sparrow | 3 |
| White-crowned Sparrow | 4 |
| Dark-eyed Junco | 30 |
| House Finch | 30 |
| Lesser Goldfinch | 12 |
| American Goldfinch | 3 |
Malibu Lagoon Trip Report: 28 Feb. 2010
Fortunately the tsunami (if any) from the Chilean earthquake hit the lagoon on Saturday or we might all have been swept out to sea. As it was, about half of us got our feet wet when – backs to the ocean, diligently studying Black Skimmers and assorted gulls, terns and peeps across the narrow outlet stream – we were rudely assaulted by a 6-inch-high wall of water and foam lunging at us across the beach berm. Gradually the tide receded, but even three hours after (predicted) high tide, the occasional big one sent us scurrying. The surfers were having a great time frolicking in the water (check Kurt Vonnegut’s novel Galapagos for where this activity may lead).
The beach was significantly altered by the recent storm and the birds had a section all to themselves, separated from the “human-dominated” zones by two outlet streams running more-or-less parallel to the shore. Here they snoozed or stalked the water-edge searching for invertebrate snacks. Among them were 5 Black Skimmers (down from 6 in Jan.), 3 1st-year Glaucous-winged Gulls, 2 American Avocets, now with almost solid red heads (probably the same two birds we had in Jan.), and 7 Heermann’s Gulls, not yet fled to their breeding grounds on islands in the southern Sea of Cortez, where they nest early to avoid the fierce heat of late spring.
32 terns in various postures and black-crown plumages initiated, as usual, a few debates among those who are never quite certain what differentiates a Royal Tern from an Elegant. After the combatants were separated, they unanimously agreed they were all Royal, or all Elegant, or some of each. Like all trip leaders who follow the Bird Guide’s Official Motto of “Often wrong but never in doubt”, I pronounced them all Royal Tern (save the solitary Elegant added later).
Other than that, 1 early Northern Rough-winged Swallow and 1 Semipalmated Plover were notable early additions to the 2010 list, the 35 Gadwall was the 2nd highest total ever, while the large drop in total numbers from January (especially California Gulls) was probably due to yesterday’s rainstorm, the condition of the beach and the high water in the lagoon created by high tide inflow.
| Malibu Lagoon Bird | 2010 | 2010 | 2010 | |
| Census for 2010 | Jan | Feb | Qtr 1 | |
| Temp> | 41-65 | 55-61 | Totals | |
| Tide> | +.65 | +6.19 | ||
| Time> | L:1131 | H:0835 | ||
| 1 | Gadwall | 20 | 35 | 55 |
| 2 | American Wigeon | 12 | 12 | |
| 3 | Mallard | 10 | 13 | 23 |
| 4 | Northern Shoveler | 4 | 4 | |
| 5 | Green-winged Teal | 7 | 2 | 9 |
| 6 | Lesser Scaup | 1 | 1 | |
| 7 | Surf Scoter | 35 | 4 | 39 |
| 8 | Long-tailed Duck | 1 | 1 | |
| 9 | Bufflehead | 6 | 6 | |
| 10 | Red-brstd Merganser | 8 | 5 | 13 |
| 11 | Ruddy Duck | 30 | 14 | 44 |
| 12 | Red-throated Loon | 1 | 1 | 2 |
| 13 | Pacific Loon | 1 | 1 | 2 |
| 14 | Common Loon | 1 | 1 | |
| 15 | Pied-billed Grebe | 1 | 1 | |
| 16 | Horned Grebe | 1 | 1 | |
| 17 | Eared Grebe | 3 | 3 | |
| 18 | Western Grebe | 15 | 6 | 21 |
| 19 | Brown Pelican | 35 | 81 | 116 |
| 20 | Brandt’s Cormorant | 1 | 2 | 3 |
| 21 | Dble-crstd Cormorant | 42 | 21 | 63 |
| 22 | Pelagic Cormorant | 1 | 1 | |
| 23 | Great Blue Heron | 2 | 2 | |
| 24 | Great Egret | 3 | 3 | 6 |
| 25 | Snowy Egret | 15 | 4 | 19 |
| 26 | Red-shouldered Hawk | 1 | 1 | |
| 27 | Red-tailed Hawk | 1 | 3 | 4 |
| 28 | Peregrine Falcon | 2 | 2 | |
| 29 | Sora | 1 | 1 | 2 |
| 30 | American Coot | 284 | 175 | 459 |
| 31 | Blk-bellied Plover | 45 | 59 | 104 |
| 32 | Snowy Plover | 54 | 49 | 103 |
| 33 | Semipalmated Plover | 1 | 1 | |
| 34 | Killdeer | 4 | 4 | |
| 35 | Black Oystercatcher | 2 | 2 | |
| 36 | American Avocet | 2 | 2 | 4 |
| 37 | Willet | 15 | 15 | 30 |
| 38 | Spotted Sandpiper | 4 | 2 | 6 |
| 39 | Whimbrel | 2 | 2 | |
| 40 | Marbled Godwit | 4 | 17 | 21 |
| 41 | Ruddy Turnstone | 13 | 11 | 24 |
| 42 | Sanderling | 85 | 172 | 257 |
| 43 | Least Sandpiper | 21 | 21 | |
| 44 | Heermann’s Gull | 5 | 7 | 12 |
| 45 | Ring-billed Gull | 55 | 42 | 97 |
| 46 | California Gull | 875 | 45 | 920 |
| 47 | Western Gull | 45 | 74 | 119 |
| 48 | Glaucous-winged Gull | 6 | 3 | 9 |
| 49 | Royal Tern | 12 | 32 | 44 |
| 50 | Elegant Tern | 1 | 1 | 2 |
| 51 | Forster’s Tern | 1 | 1 | |
| 52 | Black Skimmer | 6 | 5 | 11 |
| 53 | Rock Pigeon | 8 | 4 | 12 |
| 54 | Mourning Dove | 2 | 2 | |
| 55 | Anna’s Hummingbird | 3 | 3 | 6 |
| 56 | Allen’s Hummingbird | 2 | 3 | 5 |
| 57 | Black Phoebe | 4 | 5 | 9 |
| 58 | Say’s Phoebe | 1 | 1 | 2 |
| 59 | American Crow | 5 | 4 | 9 |
| 60 | Rough-wingd Swallow | 1 | 1 | |
| 61 | Bushtit | 4 | 5 | 9 |
| 62 | Bewick’s Wren | 2 | 2 | |
| 63 | Northern Mockingbird | 2 | 3 | 5 |
| 64 | European Starling | 35 | 41 | 76 |
| 65 | Yellow-rumped Warbler | 8 | 4 | 12 |
| 66 | Common Yellowthroat | 3 | 1 | 4 |
| 67 | Spotted Towhee | 1 | 1 | 2 |
| 68 | California Towhee | 2 | 1 | 3 |
| 69 | Song Sparrow | 3 | 6 | 9 |
| 70 | White-crwnd Sparrow | 4 | 4 | |
| 71 | Red-winged Blackbird | 3 | 3 | |
| 72 | Western Meadowlark | 1 | 1 | |
| 73 | Great-tailed Grackle | 1 | 1 | |
| 74 | House Finch | 12 | 3 | 15 |
| 75 | Lesser Goldfinch | 4 | 4 | |
| Jan | Feb | Qtr 1 | ||
| Site Visits | 1 | 1 | 2 | |
| Total Birds | 1906 | 1000 | 2906 | |
| Totals by Type | ||||
| Waterfowl | 134 | 73 | 207 | |
| Water Birds-Other | 386 | 289 | 675 | |
| Herons, Egrets | 20 | 7 | 27 | |
| Quail & Raptors | 4 | 3 | 7 | |
| Shorebirds | 251 | 328 | 579 | |
| Gulls & Terns | 1006 | 209 | 1215 | |
| Doves | 10 | 4 | 14 | |
| Other Non-Pass. | 5 | 6 | 11 | |
| Passerines | 90 | 81 | 171 | |
| Totals Birds | 1906 | 1000 | 2906 | |
| Total Species* | Jan | Feb | Qtr 1* | |
| Waterfowl | 11 | 6 | 9 | |
| Water Birds-Other | 12 | 9 | 11 | |
| Herons, Egrets | 3 | 2 | 3 | |
| Quail & Raptors | 3 | 1 | 2 | |
| Shorebirds | 12 | 9 | 11 | |
| Gulls & Terns | 9 | 8 | 9 | |
| Doves | 2 | 1 | 2 | |
| Other Non-Pass. | 2 | 2 | 2 | |
| Passerines | 16 | 15 | 16 | |
| Totals Species | 70 | 53 | 62 | |
| *Species quarterly | ||||
| totals averaged |
Meeting 20 Feb.: Sepulveda Basin Master Plan Community Workshop
When: Saturday, 20 February, 2010, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Where: Sepulveda Garden Center, 16633 Magnolia Blvd., Encino, Ca. 91406
I encourage all of you who are not involved with the Audubon Southern California Coordinating Committee meeting on Saturday (Feb. 20) to attend this community workshop on the updating of the Sepulveda Basin Master Plan. This is part of updating the master land use plan of the entire Sepulveda Basin for the first time in over 30 years and will be important in shaping changes to the Basin.
You may want to express support for some of the ideas that I and other members of the Sepulveda Basin Wildlife Areas Steering Committee are promoting or have other suggestions. Here is a rough description of what I hope the new Master Plan will include:
1. The former corn maize field immediately east of Woodley Avenue and between Woodley Park and the Wildlife Reserve should become part of the Wildlife Reserve, as an enhancement and link to both Woodley Section 2 and the Wildlife Reserve.
2. The east bank of Haskell Creek and adjoining field along the stretch from the Reserve access road (“Wildlife Way”) to Victory Blvd. should be restored as riparian habitat.
3. The area north of the Reserve parking to the archery range and dam wall, which is currently but unclearly defined as Wildlife Reserve, should be protected and improved as part of the Wildlife Reserve.
4. All water courses within Sepulveda Basin, including those now treated as drainage channels, should be managed as riparian corridors, including Hayvenhurst, Woodley and Encino Channels/Creeks.
As meetings take place, these goals will be refined and improved.
I hope you will attend and actively participate in the meeting, including writing your own comments on what you want to keep as is and what changes you hope to see.
Muriel Kotin























