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27 December ’09 – Malibu Lagoon Trip Report & July – December 2009 Results

December 27, 2009

The few, the happy few, the band of brothers & sisters on St. Crispin's Day (C.Almdale 12/09)

Cool and cloudy weather greeted those who ventured out, but the birding was great and the weather warmed up to be quite pleasant. Loads of gulls, shorebirds and ducks. Surfers were out in force as the waves were great (storm warning issued for 3 p.m.) but the water was very cold. I found this out when I waded across the outlet stream to count Snowy Plovers – 59 birds, including the banded bird “brown, orange : white, white” now spending his/her 3rd month at the lagoon. The tide was far out with more rocks showing than I can previously recall.

Adult Heermann's Gull (C.Almdale 12/09)

They were mostly covered with California Gulls but 4 Black Oystercatchers were among them, only the 8th time we’ve had them at the lagoon. (They’ve been there since Christmas Day, apparently.) One Glaucous-winged Gull among the Western Gulls. Those who stayed to the end got scope views of the distant Long-tailed Duck (aka Oldsquaw) hanging out with a small flotilla of Surf Scoters over by the Malibu Pier. This was a life bird for some and a new bird for the lagoon area. After counting plovers, I headed towards the pier to photo it, but it headed out to sea. Altogether we had 2,638 birds in 63 species. See the chart below for the details.

Here is a record of the period July-December for the lagoon. Six visits, 105 species total with 6,791 individual birds counted. Not too shabby!  Link to January-June 2009 sightings.

Malibu Bird Census 2009 2009 2009 2009 2009 2009
For 2009 Jul 26
Aug 23
Sep 27
Oct 25
Nov 22
Dec 27
Temperature 68-75 65-75 72-80 60-74 60-72 50-60
Tide Height +0.4 +5.7 +3.9 +3.5 +4.6 +0.2
Low/High & Time L:0704 H:1201 H:0731 L:0941 H:1137 L:1241
Wood Duck 1
Gadwall 4 11 4 7 23
American Wigeon 8 10 6 26
Mallard 25 35 22 24 15 16
Northern Shoveler 8 25 5 15
Northern Pintail 1 1
Green-winged Teal 4 6 8
Greater Scaup 1
Surf Scoter 50
Long-tailed Duck 1
Bufflehead 5 25
Red-brstd Merganser 1 3
Ruddy Duck 1 18 20 25
Red-throated Loon 3
Pacific Loon 5
Common Loon 1 1 2
Pied-billed Grebe 6 7 4 10 5 5
Eared Grebe 6 1
Western Grebe 2 20 15 4
Brown Pelican 40 185 12 8 12 56
Brandt’s Cormorant 1 2
Dble-crstd Cormorant 15 12 14 25 29 35
Pelagic Cormorant 3 1 3
Great Blue Heron 3 7 5 4 3 4
Great Egret 5 5 3 1 1
Snowy Egret 40 17 14 15 8 20
Green Heron 1
Blk-crwnd N-Heron 2 3 4 1
Cooper’s Hawk 1
Red-shouldered Hawk 1
Red-tailed Hawk 1 1 1 2
Merlin 1
Peregrine Falcon 1
Sora 2 4 6 2
Virginia Rail 1 1
American Coot 20 147 266 295 403
Blk-bellied Plover 71 102 114 89 45
Snowy Plover 1 36 33 61 48 59
Semipalmated Plover 10 2
Killdeer 3 4 5 3 4
Black Oystercatcher 4
Black-necked Stilt 2
Lesser Yellowlegs 1
Willet 1 16 33 40 18 12
Spotted Sandpiper 2 1 4 2 2
Whimbrel 1 29 6 6 5 4
Marbled Godwit 2 4 25 14 14
Ruddy Turnstone 11 4 12 13 18
Black Turnstone 1 2
Sanderling 105 41 145 155 115
Western Sandpiper 1 8 5
Least Sandpiper 3 3 12 35
Pectoral Sandpiper 2
Dunlin 2 4
Short-billd Dowitcher 3 6 20
Wilson’s Snipe 1
Heermann’s Gull 12 21 14 12 13 24
Ring-billed Gull 2 2 14 50 360
California Gull 2 1 15 123 58 1060
Herring Gull 1 1
Western Gull 30 132 84 82 67 68
Glaucous-wingd Gull 1
Caspian Tern 1 1 1
Royal Tern 3
Elegant Tern 1 5 11 1
Forster’s Tern 1
Least Tern 1
Rock Pigeon 1 6 4 6 6 4
Eur. Collared-Dove 1
Mourning Dove 1 4 2 10 3 2
Anna’s Hummingbird 1 1 3 1 4 3
Allen’s Hummingbird 3 2 2 2 2 2
Belted Kingfisher 1 1 1 1
Black Phoebe 6 6 7 6 6 5
Say’s Phoebe 1 1 2
Western Kingbird 2
American Crow 1 3 6 5 6 2
Tree Swallow 1
Rough-wingd Swallow 2 3
Cliff Swallow 24 2
Barn Swallow 12 25 2
Oak Titmouse 1
Bushtit 6 7 40
Bewick’s Wren 5 1
House Wren 3 1
Marsh Wren 2 1 2
Wrentit 1
Northern Mockingbird 3 2 3 3 1 1
European Starling 6 8 8 12 6 10
Ornge-crwnd Warbler 1
Yellow-rumpd Warbler 2 3 6 12
Common Yellowthroat 2 1 3 3 5 5
Spotted Towhee 1
California Towhee 2 2 2
Savannah Sparrow 2 8 3
Song Sparrow 1 4 4 6 4 4
White-crwnd Sparrow 4 4 1
Red-winged Blackbird 2 1
Western Meadowlark 4 1
Brewer’s Blackbird 1
Great-tailed Grackle 2 3
Brwn-headed Cowbird 1 1
Hooded Oriole 2
House Finch 24 5 4 4 6 6
Lesser Goldfinch 1 7
Totals by Type Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Waterfowl 26 39 51 86 65 193
Water Birds – Other 81 204 185 341 367 519
Herons, Egrets & Ibis 50 32 27 20 13 24
Quail & Raptors 1 1 1 2 3 1
Shorebirds 4 303 243 455 347 313
Gulls & Terns 44 162 120 244 190 1515
Doves 3 10 6 16 9 6
Other Non-Passerines 5 3 6 3 7 6
Passerines 95 64 61 66 92 61
Total Birds 309 818 700 1233 1093 2638
Total Species Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Waterfowl 2 2 6 7 8 11
Water Birds – Other 4 3 8 9 10 11
Herons, Egrets & Ibis 4 4 5 3 4 2
Quail & Raptors 1 1 1 2 2 1
Shorebirds 4 16 14 14 9 12
Gulls & Terns 3 8 5 7 6 7
Doves 3 2 2 2 2 2
Other Non-Passerines 3 2 3 2 3 3
Passerines 16 13 18 17 15 14
Totals – Species 40 51 62 63 59 63

Holiday Decorations – Toxic or No ?

December 5, 2009
by

The resources for this topic are Margaret Huffman, our native plant expert, and a dandy little book Poisonous Plants of California by Fuller and McClintock.

1) Starting off with an easy one – the song… and “a partridge in a pear tree” – pear – Pyrus communis : toxic or non-toxic ? Not toxic. Do birds eat them – yes – the fruit.

2) Ivy -Hedera helix – English Ivy as in the old carol “the holly and the ivy” and which many of us have holding our hillsides and lawns together ? Yes – can be – leaves and berries – gastroenteritis and allergic contact dermatitis.
Do birds eat – yes, particularly the berries.

3) Toyon- Heteromeles arbutifolia -the lovely native with the glorious red berries ? Member of the rose family. Toxic – Seeds or kernel and the leaves especially when damaged by frost. Toxin called by old name of prussic acid. Large amounts can kill livestock. Do birds eat the berries ? Yes when they are “ dead ripe”. Margaret’s comment is that we know they are ripe when they are gone (the birds figure this out first).

4) Poinsettia – Euphorbia pulcherrima – the holiday house plant (red is the choice of 90% according to surveys) – and can be grown in some yards here.. Toxic – yes, leaves, stems and milky sap. Touched – irritant dermatitis and ingested may cause gastritis, but generally not known to be fatal. To be fatal a person must eat 600-700 leaves. Beware of red salads!

5) Mistletoe -Phoradendron tomentosum – the California native – the druids’ favorite plant and the kissing plant. Entire plant is toxic. A few berries can cause moderate abdominal pain etc., while a tea made from leaves can be fatal. Birds, however, eat seeds/berries and propagate the plant.

6) Pyracantha – Firethorn – toxic – yes. Seeds are known to produce small amounts of hydrogen cyanide. As with the Toyon, birds eat seed when the berries are “dead ripe”. How do people know…. the berries are gone.

7) English Yew ,Taxus baccata, is cultivated in California…. this Yew is fatal (can cause death) and was also famous for being the wood of the longbows of England in the 100 years war (1337-1453). The bark of the Pacific Yew, Taxus brevifolia, however, is used to produce tamoxifen ,a breast cancer treatment, and lacks toxic alkaloids. Birds can eat the berries.

So……. use these festive plants as decoration, be careful of berries around children and pets – birds may eat the berries, but people probably should not and remember this number # 1-800-222-1222 which is the United State National Poison Hotline.. they will automatically connect you with the nearest poison center – 1-800-222-1222.

Happy Holidays.

Ellen Vahan

Birding TV Show & Bird Articles from “Science News”

December 3, 2009

Birding Adventures is a new show broadcast locally by Fox Sports West (and FSN West HD) at Saturday, 7:30 a.m. For us in the north San Fernando Valley with DirecTV, that’s channel 652 but check your local listings for your area and provider. If you don’t have either cable or satellite TV, you probably can’t receive it. During each 30-minute show host James Currie focuses on a different locale and “target bird,” but they get in plenty of other birds, non-birds, and local culture. So far we’ve seen: Island Scrub Jay, California Condor and Yellow-billed Magpie (California), Sun Parakeet and Guinan Cock-of-the-Rock (Guiana), and Black-crowned Antpitta (Panama). Coming up, I don’t know when, they’ll be in Suriname looking for Ornate Hawk-Eagle, Gray-winged Trumpeter (one of my favorite SoAmer birds) and Black Curassow. Set your electronic robot to record it. The show’s website is: http://www.birdingadventures.com/index.php

And now for some magazine articles:

Birds’ eyes, not beaks, sense magnetic fields
http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/48895/title/Birds_eyes%2C_not_beaks%2C_sense_magnetic_fields
A new study pinpoints migratory songbirds’ magnetic compass in a specific brain region.
From Science News Online 10/29/09

Macaws bred far from tropics during pre-Columbian times
http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/49308/title/Macaws_bred_far_from_tropics_during_pre-Columbian_times

Colorful birds possibly raised for ceremonial and trade purposes long before Spanish arrival.
From Science News Online 11/7/09

Penguin DNA evolving faster than thought
http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/49671/title/Penguin_DNA_evolving_faster_than_thought
Comparing the DNA in modern birds to that in ancient generations shows molecular evolution happens at varying rates, and that each species has its own rate of evolution.
From Science News Online 11/18/09

Malibu Lagoon Sightings Oct-Nov 2009

November 22, 2009

Merlin momentarily resting (L.Johnson 11/09)

This is an experiment to see if it is feasible to post a table of bird sightings in this blog. If it works, we’ll try to post this monthly, reporting the sightings for the quarter. Thus Jan 2010 will have only one month, Feb will report two months and March will have all three. So far, my experimentation shows that the blog won’t allow enough columns for an entire year’s worth of data. In this month’s table the two rightmost columns show totals for the entire year.

November 22, 2009. We had 59 species total on an unusually fine day for late November, with the most unusual sighting being the female or juvenile Merlin who was very busy catching dragonflies off the water. I saw it catch 4 in about 5 minutes, and it had been doing this for quite a while before I started counting. In other notes, there were 48 Snowy Plovers on the beach, including the bird banded Left Leg: Brown/Orange; Right Leg: White/White which was present on October 25 as well. It was one of three fledglings identically “brood banded” at Vandenberg Air Force Base this past summer.

MALIBU BIRD YEAR – 2009 2009 2009 2009
COUNTS MONTH – 10 11 Year Number
SMABS Collected DAY – 25 22 Total Of
2009
Tide > L +3.5 H +4.6 Birds Months
Species Tide Time > 0941 1137 Seen Seen
1 (Black) Brant 6 3
2 Wood Duck 1 1 1
3 Gadwall Gadwall 4 7 110 10
4 American Wigeon 10 6 58 7
5 Mallard Mallard 24 15 236 11
6 Cinnamon Teal 9 2
7 Northern Shoveler 25 5 84 6
8 Northern Pintail 2 2
9 Green-winged Teal 4 6 51 5
10 Greater Scaup 1 1
11 Lesser Scaup 1 1
12 Surf Scoter 28 3
13 Bufflehead Bufflehead 5 24 3
14 Red-breasted Merganser 1 13 4
15 Ruddy Duck 18 20 94 8
16 Red-throated Loon 2 1
17 Pacific Loon 6 4
18 Common Loon 1 1 3 3
19 Pied-billed Grebe 10 5 41 10
20 Horned Grebe 2 2
21 Eared Grebe 6 6 1
22 Western Grebe 20 15 81 6
23 Brown Pelican 8 12 1009 11
24 Brandt’s Cormorant 1 2 10 6
25 Double-crested Cormorant 25 29 250 11
26 Pelagic Cormorant 1 8 5
27 Great Blue Heron 4 3 37 10
28 Great Egret 1 1 28 9
29 Snowy Egret 15 8 150 11
30 Green Heron 2 2
31 Black-crowned Night-Heron 1 14 6
32 Turkey Vulture 1 1
33 Osprey Osprey 1 1
34 Cooper’s Hawk 2 2
35 Red-shouldered Hawk 2 2
36 Red-tailed Hawk 1 2 11 9
37 American Kestral 1 1
38 Merlin Merlin 1 1 1
39 Peregrine Falcon 1 1 1
40 Sora Rail 4 6 16 6
41 Virginia Rail 1 2 2
42 American Coot 266 295 1237 10
43 Blk-bellied Plover 114 89 510 8
44 Snowy Plover 61 48 306 8
45 Semipalmated Plover 27 3
46 Killdeer Killdeer 5 3 23 9
47 Black Oystercatcher 2 1
48 Black-necked Stilt 2 1
49 American Avocet 13 3
50 Greater Yellowlegs 2 2
51 Lesser Yellowlegs 1 1
52 Willet Willet 40 18 137 10
53 Spotted Sandpiper 4 2 17 8
54 Whimbrel Whimbrel 6 5 66 10
55 Marbled Godwit 25 14 91 7
56 Ruddy Turnstone 12 13 95 8
57 Black Turnstone 2 3 2
58 Sanderling Sanderling 145 155 642 7
59 Western Sandpiper 5 40 6
60 Least Sandpiper 12 28 7
61 Pectoral Sandpiper 2 1
62 Dunlin Dunlin 4 7 3
63 Short-billed Dowitcher 20 29 3
64 Boneparte’s Gull 1 1
65 Heermann’s Gull 12 13 210 11
66 Ring-billed Gull 14 50 298 9
67 California Gull 123 58 2196 10
68 Herring Gull 1 1 3 3
69 Western Gull 82 67 937 11
70 Glaucous-winged Gull 32 4
71 Caspian Tern 1 62 6
72 Royal Tern 19 5
73 Elegant Tern 11 1 795 8
74 Forster’s Tern 2 1
75 Least Tern 1 1
76 Black Skimmer 30 1
77 Rock Pigeon 6 6 57 11
78 Eurasian Collrd Dove 1 1
79 Mourning Dove 10 3 34 10
80 Black-hooded Parakeet 6 1
81 Anna’s Hummingbird 1 4 21 11
82 Allen’s Hummingbird 2 2 36 11
83 Belted Kingfisher 1 4 4
84 Downy Woodpecker 1 1
85 Pacific Slope Flycatcher 1 1
86 Black Phoebe 6 6 86 11
87 Say’s Phoebe 1 1 5 5
88 Western Kingbird 4 2
89 American Crow 5 6 66 11
90 Common Raven 2 1
91 Tree Swallow 1 181 2
92 Rough-winged Swallow 74 7
93 Cliff Swallow 49 5
94 Barn Swallow 53 7
95 Oak Titmouse 1 1 1
96 Bushtit Bushtit 40 80 7
97 Bewick’s Wren 5 1 6 2
98 House Wren 1 4 2
99 Marsh Wren 2 1 5 4
100 Ruby-crowned Kinglet 1 1
101 Wrentit Wrentit 2 2
102 Northern Mockingbird 3 1 25 11
103 European Starling 12 6 160 11
104 Orange-crowned Warbler 3 2
105 Yellow-rumped Warbler 3 6 33 6
106 Common Yellowthroat 3 5 22 10
107 Spotted Towhee 2 2
108 California Towhee 2 17 6
109 Savannah Sparrow 8 10 2
110 Song Sparrow 6 4 56 11
111 White-crowned Sparrow 4 4 16 4
112 Red-winged Blackbird 6 4
113 Western Meadowlark 1 5 2
114 Brewer’s Blackbird 1 1
115 Great-tailed Grackle 3 8 4
116 Brown-headed Cowbird 7 5
117 Hooded Oriole 7 3
118 Bullock’s Oriole 2 1
119 House Finch 4 6 79 11
120 Lesser Goldfinch 9 5
Total Trip Birds 1233 1093 11519
Totals Individuals
Waterfowl 86 65 718
Water Birds – Other 341 367 2673
Herons, Egrets,Ibis 20 13 231
Quail & Raptors 2 3 20
Shorebirds 455 347 2043
Gulls & Terns 244 190 4586
Doves 16 9 92
Otr Non-Pas’rines 3 7 68
Passerines 66 92 1088
Totals Birds 1233 1093 11519
Total Species
Waterfowl 7 8 15
Water Birds – Other 9 10 14
Herons,Egrets, Ibis 3 4 5
Quail & Raptors 2 2 8
Shorebirds 14 9 21
Gulls & Terns 7 6 13
Doves 2 2 3
Otr Non-Pas’erines 2 3 5
Passerines 17 15 36
Totals – Species 63 59 120

SMART GARDENING

November 19, 2009

The Native Plant Society has honored me for my contributions over the years with the gift of a native plant, a beautiful ceanothus “yankee point.”  This is a  ground cover that has lovely blue blooms in the spring and is very happy in my garden.

Thank you, Native Plant Society. Margaret