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Theodore Payne Upcoming Classes & Plant Sales Reminder

October 25, 2024

[Posted by Chuck Almdale]

It’s that time of year again, when people again say “It’s that time of year again.”

It’s also the time for fall planting of drought-tolerant (not necessarily drought-loving) California native plants. Theodore Payne has a boodle of them, in pots, ready to go. Plus seed packets seeds, books, T-shirts, and the all-important howto and whatnot.

Theodore Payne Foundation for Wild Flowers and Native Plants has a fall sale coming up on October 29 – November 9.

They also have a host of classes and walks coming up in November.

Locals who already have native plants in their yards know that TP is the place to go. But if you’re new to the L.A. area, this is your heads-up. They’ve got it all at excellent prices.

Find it all HERE on their website.

Short but true story: When we took out our front lawn in 2009 and put in California native plants, changing nothing else, our water usage immediately dropped 75%.

Gardening for Birds and Bugs | SM College & SFV Audubon

October 22, 2024

[Posted by Chuck Almdale, suggested by Ted Winterer]

Time is running out.

Class Details: 1 Session(s) Weekly – Fri
Location: 23555 Civic Center Way, Malibu, CA 90265
Instructor: **Dr. Patricia Bates, Staff, San Fernando Valley Audubon Society
Tuition: $0.00
Registration Closes: Friday, October 25, 2024 @ 9:00 AM
Link to Announcement: https://commed.smc.edu/index.cfm?method=ClassInfo.ClassInformation&int_class_id=59720&int_category_id=0&int_sub_category_id=0&int_catalog_id=0

Loss of habitat and food sources are a major driver in the declining of bird and beneficial insect populations. Even in today’s densely populated urban environment we can still make a difference by restoring and creating habitat in both public and private spaces. This seminar will emphasize how this restoration can be achieved, whether on one’s own property or in public spaces. Additionally, it will cover how this can be accomplished by using native plants suitable to each particular area as well as practices that enhance the habitat value of the area. Resources will be provided for researching plants and the fauna they support, planting tips, maintenance tips, and next steps. This will include local retailers of native plants, contractors, and even how to advocate for habitat-sustaining landscape in public projects. The seminar will conclude with a brief field trip to the adjoining Legacy Park restoration area for examples of restoration practices.

**Dr. Patricia Bates is first and foremost a lover of birds, bees, butterflies and all living creatures. She holds a Ph.D from the University of Arizona in Experimental Psych/Biology and sits on the Boards of Directors serving as treasurer of the San Fernando Valley Arts & Cultural Center (SFVACC) and the Encino Neighborhood Council. Her commitment is to preserve and protect wonderful creatures and the environment through restoring and expanding native habitat in every place and by every means possible.

Iquitos Amazon basin birding | Femi Faminu video

October 20, 2024

[Posted by Chuck Almdale]

Femi Faminu, who frequently birds with (and without) us at Malibu Lagoon, recently returned from Peru and some more northwest Amazonian Basin birding. Guitar music featured.

If you enjoyed our chapter’s recent Zoomized discussion of the Golden-collared Manakin, Femi’s trip list of 249 species includes 9 manakin species, along with 19 species of what one prominent SMBAS member always refers to as “ant-thingies.” You won’t see any of these in SoCal. Enough said. Femi’s all-too-brief YouTube photo & video film is as enjoyable as always.

If you go here https://www.youtube.com/@femif9792 you can see her other films.

Lakeside birding at Huntington Beach Central Park, 12 Oct. 2024

October 19, 2024

[Written by Liz Galton; Photos by Elyse Jankowski, Ray Juncosa & Chris Tosdevin; comments & editing by Chuck Almdale]

Lake edge: more water, fewer trees. (Ray Juncosa 10-12-24)

A total of 15 birders came to the Huntington Central Park birding trip, in very cool misty weather. We had to identify birds by outline, because color was hard to tell. Things were gray, black or white only. The lake was surrounded by far fewer trees, which made the lake easier to see, but there were fewer trees for birds to perch on. New trees are being planted, but unfortunately not native ones. The lake was mostly covered by the usual duckweed, but now there were more clear places than I’ve seen before. The edges of the lake boasted more Coots, Mallards, and yes, White-faced Ibises than usual, poking around in the mud at the edge. The usual Green Heron was present to greet us.

White-faced Ibis feeling fluffy. (Ray Juncosa 10-12-24)
American Wigeon pair in the duckweed and algae. (Elyse Jankowski 10-12-24)
American Coots all in a row (Ray Juncosa 10-12-24)

As we walked around the lake, we were pleased to see our usual migrants: brilliant Townsend’s Warblers, and a Black-and-White Warbler flitting high in the trees.

Black-and-White Warbler female Mniotilta varia. The male has blacker cheeks and throat. (Chris Tosdevin 10-12-24)

The Black-and-white Warbler is an eastern U.S. warbler with a range extending westward to the Rocky Mountains. Although they don’t nest west of the mountains they regularly appear in small numbers in the fall. These strays are quite likely the northwesternmost breeders from the Alberta-British Columbian border, occasionally straying westward across the mountains during their southern migration.

Townsend’s Warbler on the other hand, has a western range and barely crosses the southern Rockies eastward. They nest in the northern mixed coniferous forests and are common – but not abundant – spring and fall migrants in SoCal. It’s always a treat to see them in their bright yellow and black plumage.

Townsend’s Warbler male Setophaga townsendi. (Elyse Jankowski 10-12-24)

By then the fog was lifting, fortunately, and we could see their colors. A mysterious mammal slept in a tree, variously described as a gray raccoon or a long-haired opossum. The head was hidden, but we could see five toes jutting upward. Unfortunately for identification purposes, both raccoons and opossums have five toes per foot. Other cute bushy-tailed mammals checked us out for hand-outs.

The Great Horned Owl, although reportedly in his station at his nest, could not be found, although earnestly searched for. Chuck later grew suspicious of the passerby’s report of “one over by the library poking his head over the edge of the nest,” when he recalled that these owls generally don’t start nesting until February, so the likelihood of one in a nest in October was quite slim. More likely the informant saw an owl-head-shaped bunch of dead leaves caught on a limb.

Common Yellowthroat male. As they love water, they have become very common around the expanded lake. (Chris Tosdevin 10-12-24)
A former crossing, now great habitat. (Ray Juncosa 10-12-24)

After checking the UofC-Irvine web page on Spiders of Orange County, we submitted Elyse’s spider photo below to iNaturalist. Chuck decided it was likely a Spotted Orbweaver, probably Neoscona crucifera, based both upon the above web page and a few iNat photos. One commentator agreed on Neoscona sp. but not N. crucifera, unhelpfully without explaining why. Whatever it was, it was apparently in the midst of enjoying its meal.

Spotted Orbweaver spider, probably Neoscona crucifera. (Elyse Jankowski 10-12-24)

Some birders spotted a Hutton’s Vireo. The two photos below, possibly of the same individual bird, demonstrate how varied a bird can be depending on light or distance, and how photographs can vary when displaying them. The white broken eyering and bill shape/color are good marks for Hutton’s, and especially so is the darkish “bar” between the two white wing-bars. The very similar Ruby-crowned Kinglet (also seen today) has a similar dark “bar” but it is below the lower wing-bar. But Hutton’s is typically a grayish-olive bird, not bright yellow below.

Hutton’s Vireo (L – Chris Tosdevin, R – Elyse Jankowski 10-12-24)
Vermilion Flycatcher male. (Elyse Jankowski 10-12-24)
Vermilion Flycatcher male, checks the rear view. (Ray Juncosa 10-12-24)

We delighted in seeing both Mr. and Mrs. Vermilion Flycatcher, as well as male and female Pin-tailed Whydah, the male spectacular with his long tail.

Pin-tailed Wydah Vidua macroura. (Chris Tosdevin 10-12-24)

The female of this sub-Saharan species is small, only 4.75″ and has a bright red bill. The male at 12.5″ is almost three times as long, all of it in the tail. The male was perched in a tree adjacent to the lake near the Secret Garden a bit north of the library.

This area also hosted most of the turtles we saw. By this time the clouds had cleared and the sun was out, and it was sun-basking time for turtles. They all seemed to be Red-eared Sliders, native to eastern U.S. People buy them as pets at the store when they’re small, cute and cuddly, then unload them at the nearest pond when they get old, grumpy and picky about what they’re willing to eat.

Red-eared Slider Trachemys scripta elegans. (Elyse Jankowski 10-12-24)

Raptors flew overhead: both Red-tailed and Red-shouldered Hawks, Turkey Vultures and an Osprey, parked over the water. A Belted Kingfisher darted across the lake.

After several hours of birding, there was the welcome sight of a restaurant, right there in the park, where we gratefully partook of the offerings.

When a large bird flew in to land in the lakeside trees next to our lunch table, we immediately recognized it as a flicker, but not just any flicker. Judging by the head markings it was an intergrade. The western Red-shafted Flicker has a red “whisker” while the eastern Yellow-shafted has a black whisker and a red nape. This bird has both whisker and nape of red, not something you see every day. Judging by the very slim streak of lightness along the end of the lower edge of the wing, visible in the photo below, it may have had yellow feather shafts.

Northern Flicker intergrade. (Chris Tosdevin 10-12-24)

A few more birds were added to the list and off we drove, after a lovely birding day.

The lake edge (Ray Juncosa 10-12-24)

Identify all species. Some photos have additional questions.
All photos taken Huntington Beach Central Park East, 12 October 2024.

#1. What is this bird up to?
#2. Check the wing and bill.
#3. Why is unusual about this bird’s feet?
#4. Considering its name, what does this bird lack?
#5. What’s sticking out of its bill?
#6. Are its feet always green, and what field mark is almost absent?
#7. What’s wrong with this bird’s name?
#8. What is she doing, and how do you know it’s a “she?”
#9. What’s a useful field mark for this species?
#10. Name Order and Family, English or scientific.
#11. What’s a useful field mark for this species?
#12. Sex?
#13. Does this species occur in Europe? Does it’s family?
#14. How do birds know when berries are ripe?
#15. Sex? Family?
#16. Did this species have a recent name-change?
#17. What habitat does this species like?
#18. Sex? Best field mark?
#19. Why is this bird’s name not very useful for ID purposes?
#20. How do you tell male from female?
#21. Is this the eastern or western subspecies?
#22. Sex?

Quiz answers, credits & comments
#1. American Wigeon female, stretching her wings. (Elyse Jankowski 10-12-24)
#2. Female Mallard has a blue speculum and a saddle of black on the orange bill. (Elyse Jankowski 10-12-24)
#3. American Coots are closely related to cranes, not ducks. Flexible lobes on their toes enable them to both swim and walk well, unlike birds with webbed feet. (Elyse Jankowski 10-12-24)
#4. Spotted Sandpiper has no spots. (Chris Tosdevin 10-12-24)
#5. Green Heron juvenile, sticking out its tongue. (Elyse Jankowski 10-12-24)
#6. White-faced Ibis has algae or duckweed on its foot and no white on the face. (Elyse Jankowski 10-12-24)
#7. Osprey preys on fish, not bones. (Elyse Jankowski 10-12-24)
#8. Belted Kingfisher female has cinnamon flanks and is scratching her head with her foot. (Chris Tosdevin 10-12-24)
#9. Downy Woodpecker’s bill is much shorter than the similar Hairy Woodpecker. (Elyse Jankowski 10-12-24)
#10. Black Phoebe (Elyse Jankowski 10-12-24) Order Passeriformes/passerines, Family Tyrannidae/tyrant flycatchers.
#11. Cassin’s Kingbird white chin contrast with dark gray breast. (Elyse Jankowski 10-12-24)
#12. Vermilion Flycatcher female. (Chris Tosdevin 10-12-24)
#13. House Wren is a New World species, but Eurasian Wren occurs from Iceland to Siberia. (Chris Tosdevin 10-12-24)
#14. Western Bluebird. (Elyse Jankowski 10-12-24) Many bird species can see into infra-red or ultra-violet, plus have four-color retinas able to detect ripening fruit color changes invisible to human eyes.
#15. Male Scaly-breasted Munia Lonchura punctulata. (Elyse Jankowski 10-12-24) This common cage-bird’s native range is Pakistan to east China and Indonesia. Family Estrildidae Waxbills & allies. They have many, many common names (written about previously here).
#16. Swinhoe’s White-eye Zosterops simplex (Chris Tosdevin 10-12-24), was formerly considered a subspecies of Japanese White-eye Zosterops japonicus, widespread across east Asia and Indonesia. Elevated to full species status in 2018, and “Japanese White-eye” was changed to Warbling White-eye. Thelatter bird is widely pictured in Japanese art. As a whole, the white-eye family is naturally widespread, ranging from southern Africa to east Asia. As cage birds, they are found world wide, sometimes escaping and becoming locally established as in this park.
#17. Song Sparrow (Ray Juncosa 10-12-24) likes to be near water.
#18. Common Yellowthroat female (Chris Tosdevin 10-12-24). The pattern of yellow throat bordered by brown replicates the male pattern where the black mask replaces the brown. See the male above, not in the quiz but in the 7th picture from the top.
#19. Orange-crowned Warbler (Chris Tosdevin 10-12-24) rarely displays it’s erectable orange crown.
#20. Yellow Warbler (Elyse Jankowski 10-12-24) male has bold red streaks when breeding.
#21. Yellow-rumped Warbler (Ray Juncosa 10-12-24) western auduboni form has broken eye-ring, eastern coronata has white line (supercilium) above eye.
#22. Black-and-White Warbler female lacks black throat & cheek. (Chris Tosdevin 10-12-24)

There! Wasn’t that fun? It’s (almost) just like you were there!

Huntington Beach Central Park on eBird as of 10-19-24: 8607 lists, 1670 eBirders, 305 species.
Most recent species added: Wrentit, 11 Aug 2024 by James Davison.

Key: X – present; Bold – recent exotics; sub 1– heard; sub 2 – species intergrade; sub 3 – Eastern U.S. species.

  Huntington Beach Central Park   
 Year20242023202220192018
 Date10/1210/1410/1510/1210/13
1Canada Goose40    
1Egyptian Goose24 XX
1Cinnamon Teal1 1  
1Gadwall    X
1Eurasian Wigeon    X
1American Wigeon1615X 
1Mallard401637X 
1Green-winged Teal2    
2Pied-billed Grebe4    
7Feral Pigeon  1  
7Mourning Dove25 X 
8Anna’s Hummingbird12 XX
8Allen’s Hummingbird327XX
2Virginia Rail11    
2American Coot501130XX
5Long-billed Dowitcher  18  
5Spotted Sandpiper22   
5Greater Yellowlegs 1   
6Western Gull1    
6Gull (species)  1  
2Double-crested Cormorant 11 X
3Great Blue Heron421 X
3Great Egret212XX
3Snowy Egret1213XX
3Green Heron411 X
3Black-crowned Night-Heron313XX
3White-faced Ibis3041XX
4Turkey Vulture11   
4Osprey121  
4Cooper’s Hawk1 2 X
4Red-shouldered Hawk113XX
4Red-tailed Hawk1 1  
8Belted Kingfisher111 X
8Downy Woodpecker212XX
8Nuttall’s Woodpecker32 X 
8Northern Flicker 2112XX
4American Kestrel11 XX
4Peregrine Falcon1    
9Cassin’s Kingbird41   
9Western Wood-Pewee   X 
9Pacific-slope Flycatcher    X
9Black Phoebe1558XX
9Say’s Phoebe12   
9Vermilion Flycatcher3    
9Hutton’s Vireo1    
9Warbling Vireo 1   
9California Scrub-Jay 1   
9American Crow6110XX
9Common Raven    X
9Bushtit1230 XX
9Swinhoe’s White-eye7410X 
9Ruby-crowned Kinglet21   
9Blue-gray Gnatcatcher211XX
9House Wren422XX
9Western Bluebird410 25 
9Hermit Thrush   2X
9American Robin 2  X
9Bronze Mannikin   X 
9Scaly-breasted Munia5  XX
9Pin-tailed Whydah5  X 
9House Finch10612XX
9Lesser Goldfinch424XX
9American Goldfinch 2 X 
9Dark-eyed Junco 1   
9White-crowned Sparrow  3XX
9Song Sparrow821XX
9California Towhee   XX
9Hooded Oriole   X 
9Red-winged Blackbird2    
9Brewer’s Blackbird    X
9Black-and-white Warbler311   
9Orange-crowned Warbler414XX
9Nashville Warbler   X 
9MacGillivray’s Warbler 1   
9Common Yellowthroat1217XX
9Yellow Warbler1  X 
9Yellow-rumped Warbler141614XX
9Black-throated Gray Warbler    X
9Townsend’s Warbler441XX
9Wilson’s Warbler   X 
9Western Tanager    X
 Totals by Type20242023202220192018
1Waterfowl1012143  
2Water Birds – Other551231  
3Herons, Egrets & Ibis551011  
4Quail & Raptors757  
5Shorebirds2318  
6Gulls & Terns100  
7Doves251  
8Other Non-Passerines11912  
9Passerines1309877  
 Totals Birds3641632004241
       
 Total Species20242023202220192018
1Waterfowl63333
2Water Birds – Other32212
3Herons, Egrets & Ibis66646
4Quail & Raptors74423
5Shorebirds12100
6Gulls & Terns10100
7Doves11110
8Other Non-Passerines66455
9Passerines2424132622
 Totals Species – 715548354241

Manakins, with UCLA Prof. Dr. Barney Schlinger: Zoom Evening Meeting Reminder, Tuesday, 8 October, 7:30 p.m.

October 8, 2024

You are all invited to the next ZOOM meeting
of Santa Monica Bay Audubon Society

The Wingsnappers book cover
On Oct. 8, 2024 at 7:15-7:30 pm, join the Zoom presentation by CLICKING HERE

Manakins, with UCLA Prof. Dr. Barney Schlinger
Zoom Evening Meeting, Tuesday, 8 October, 7:30 p.m.
Zoom waiting room opens 7:15 p.m.

Manakins are an extraordinary group of neotropical birds with amazing social systems and courtship behaviors.  Dr. Schlinger has studied one manakin in particular, the Golden-collared Manakin of Panama.  As with most manakin species, the males gather in groups to attract females through dance and song. But with the Golden-collared Manakin, each male performs an elaborate, noisy and acrobatic courtship display.  Dr. Schlinger will discuss his recent book entitled “The Wingsnappers: Lessons from an Exuberant Tropical Bird” and explore why manakins have evolved such complex behaviors and how they have also developed neural, hormonal and muscular specializations to allow these athletic performances.  

Dr. Barney Schlinger is Associate Dean of Life Science and Distinguished Professor of Integrative Biology & Physiology.  He has previously been an Associate Researcher at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute in Panama, a Humboldt Award winner, a visiting scientist at the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology in Germany as well as a resident ornithologist at the Bernheim Forest in Kentucky.  He has published over 175 research papers and book chapters, mostly on birds, and is an avid bird watcher.  He has done extensive studies of Golden-collared Manakins – an exuberant tropical bird.  His fascination with bird behavior and its neurological and chemical underpinnings has led to his many studies of birds in the field as well as undertaking laboratory studies of the avian brain and the hormonal control of the bird’s brain and muscle function. 

On Oct. 8, 2024 at 7:15-7:30 pm, join the Zoom presentation by CLICKING HERE

(If this button isn’t working for you, see detailed zoom invitation below.)


Meeting ID: 823 1094 2527
Passcode: 389357

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