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2023 Audubon Photos | NAS

June 29, 2023

[Posted by Chuck Almdale]

Link to 2023 National Audubon Society winners and honorable mentions. Includes two very short films.

Below: Verdin. Photo: Linda Scher/Audubon Photography Awards

Salton Sea Survey | NAS

June 27, 2023

[Posted by Chuck Almdale]

This survey request comes to us from the friendly folks at Audubon California, a division of National Audubon Society.

The survey takes about five minutes and is asking about planned as well as potential visits by folks in order to determine their preferences for access and use at the sea. The more respondents, the better.

Thank you in advance for your time on this conservation matter.

Survey in English: https://www.proprofs.com/survey/t/?title=2vqhs
Survey in Spanish: https://www.proprofs.com/survey/t/?title=bs8w
Please note that you can put a check in both columns B and C for any item.

If you have any questions about the survey, please contact:
Camila Bautista camila.bautistia@audubon.org
and/or Tammah Watts tammahwatts4socalaudubon@gmail.com


The following is a message from Audubon California’s Salton Sea Program Manager Frank Ruiz, and Salton Sea NAS-Senior Program Coordinator Camila Bautista:

We are seeking Chapter input related to Public Access at the Bombay Beach Wetlands. Here is a message from our landscape architect, Hans Baumann, as well as the survey link, for you both to look at and share with your Chapter networks.

As part of our ongoing efforts at the Salton Sea, we would like to receive input from Audubon members to better understand what amenities are most important to them when they travel outside their region to go bird-watching. Our goal is to use this information to inform public access and landscape design at the Bombay Beach Wetlands alongside a broader public outreach strategy aimed at local communities. A link to the brief, 8-question survey is below. Thanks so much for all of your help – we deeply value your feedback!

Consider this as an opportunity for you to contribute to bird conservation, community engagement and education, and community science. The birds need your help at the Salton Sea and your voice can help shape the future and the ways that you can have access when visiting.

This is an ongoing effort on our part as chapters and members council to actively engage with, highlight, and underscore the importance of the Salton Sea in our region and beyond. This is in partnership with Audubon CA, the residents of the surrounding communities of the Salton Sea, and of course, the many species of birds who are in need both in our chapter’s region and at the Salton Sea.

Advice on Binoculars

June 26, 2023

High in the Top Ten of birders’ questions is, “What binoculars should I buy?” I just came across a very interesting article by Dan Cooper, formerly on staff at Audubon’s Debs Park Center and now running his own business, Cooper Ecological Monitoring. Many of us know Dan and would trust his advice.

The article was published by the New York Times’ “Wirecutter” section and you can Click Here to see it. NYT subscription not required. I won’t say any more, but his choice is waterproof, close focusing, sharp, and under $300. Worth reading.

Mt. Piños Birds & Butterflies Reminder: Sat., 17 June, 2023, 8AM

June 14, 2023

[Posted by Chuck Almdale]

Mt. Piños is a great area for mountain birds such as Clark’s Nutcracker, White-headed Woodpecker, Mountain Quail, singing Green-tailed Towhees and Fox Sparrows, Pygmy & White Breasted Nuthatches, Cassin’s & Purple Finches, Lawrence’s Goldfinches and occasionally the ever-elusive Calliope Hummingbird.   We’re always on the lookout for one or more of the released California Condors who are again fully licensed to fly.   We will bird early, then look for butterflies.   If the wildflowers are out in force, we’ll have a good chance of finding the Calliope.   We may also drive over to Mt. Abel to take a look at “Shirley’s Seep” — an oasis for thirsty birds in dry years — located about 1/2 way up the road.

If you want to come, Call the leader ASAP but no later than Thursday, 6/15 if you’re coming. Leader: Jean Garrett 213-522-0062

Lawrence’s Goldfinch male at Shirley’s Seep (J. Waterman 6-11-17)

This trip is scheduled as a day trip, with Saturday birding from 8am until mid-afternoon. We first do some mid-elevation birding around the meeting location at the base of the mountain to give late-comers a chance to catch up. We then drive up the mountain, stopping at a few locations along the winding road, then on to Iris Meadow at road’s end. Here we have lunch when a quorum of people loudly complain of hunger.

Our famous leucistic Anna’s Hummingbird (Maja Block)

Family Guide: Lots of driving; maybe lots of walking;  days can be sunny & hot or cloudy & cool. Small patches of snow may still be present. Dress in layers, bring food and water.
Mountain Adventure Pass Not Needed: The Forest Service Ranger Station for the Mt. Piños area (661-245-3731) says we do not need a pass for this area for this time of year, only during snow season which is now officially over.
Call the leader ASAP but no later than Thursday, 6/15 if you’re coming. If they don’t know you’re coming, they won’t wait for you if you’re late. Leader: Jean Garrett 213-522-0062

The parasitic (but non-dangerous) Snow Plant are usually still emergent (L. Johnson 6/11)

[Directions] Allow 90 minutes travel time from downtown Santa Monica.
I-5 north to the Frazier Park exit.   West on Frazier Mountain Road for about 6 miles.   The name then changes to Cuddy Valley Road.   Continue northwest about 6 miles to the intersection of Cuddy Valley and Mil Potrero Roads.  
Park in the large pull-off area about 100 yards past this intersection.   (Do not expect us to meet you at the top of Mt. Piños!)  
We will briefly bird around this area, then continue up the mountain or drive over to Mt. Abel.   This is an all-day trip, so gas up your car, wear layers and bring food and water.   If you are camping, McGill & Mt. Piños campgrounds have no water, but do have wonderful new bathrooms.
FRS radio: Bring it if you have one, tuned to Channel 11, privacy channel 22.
Meet at 8:00 a.m., Saturday June 17.
Leader:
Jean Garrett 213-522-0062
[Chuck Almdale]

Terns & other birds: Malibu Lagoon, 28 May 2023

May 31, 2023

[By Chuck Almdale]

Almost ready for choir practice (Ray Juncosa 5/28/23)

I thought it time to dust off and trot out the annual “June Gloom” epithet, but the Los Angeles Times had a new one the other day — “May Gray” — so I’ll borrow that one, returning it when finished of course.

More terns, probably all Elegant (Ray Juncosa 5/28/23)

Elegant Terns bickering (Chris Tosdevin 5/28/23)

You may notice that the lighting on all these photos is a bit…underwhelming. It’s May Gray! I commented to someone that it’s often warmer in the depths of winter than the 61-62°F we had today. If you look at the bird checklist below you’ll see that both April 23 and Christmas Day of all days were both warmer than today’s “May Gray” day. [Say that rapidly six times.] Another “The sun always shines in sunny sunny sunny California” myth lies twitching in the dust.

New Elegant Terns kept dropping in (Ray Juncosa 5/28/23)

I think it must have been the Memorial Day weekend that brought so many birders out, about twice as many as I expected: faces new and faces unseen for many a month. All were welcome. Too bad the species count was a bit impoverished, as is typical for May, when most of the wintering birds are gone and the migrants have already passed through. Here’s the numbers for the past ten Mays, working backwards starting from 5/28/23: 44, 39, 44, 32, 33, 41, 30, 41, 48 and 55 on 5/25/14, for an average of 41 species. So today was slightly better than average for May.

It’s possible the two upper left terns are Royal as their bills seem a little thick. (Chris Tosdevin 5/28/23)

What we did have was a sufficiency of terns. That’s a new “collective noun of the venery” I just made up. The “official” phrase is “A committee of terns,” first used quite recently in 2014. See our blog from 4/1/22 “A Cornucopia of Collective Nouns of the Venery,” which contains links to two lists; one of them has all 934 avian collective nouns, doubly alphabetized, the other has only the really old ones. You can print them off, then whip them out at the next party you attend and cite from them ad nauseam — it’s guaranteed to win you friends and influence people.

The same Royal Tern a split-second apart. Does the bill seem thicker that those of the birds in the photo above? The dark eye and nape fringe are definitely Royal. (Chris Tosdevin 5/28/23)

Elegant Terns are just so…elegant!

— Abigail King, SMBAS founding member

This pair can’t even wait until they get to their nesting grounds. (Chris Tosdevin 5/28/23)

Finally, something that not an Elegant Tern; at 13.5″ long it’s the smallest gull we get at Malibu Lagoon. This gull is named not for Bonaparte the Emperor of France, but for his nephew Charles Lucien Jules Laurent Bonaparte, naturalist and resident of the United States, considered the father of American systematic ornithology.

Bonaparte’s Gull stops by on its way to breed in Alaska or Canada, not quite into breeding (alternate) plumage. (Chris Tosdevin 5/28/23)

The Double-crested Cormorants and a few egrets are breeding across the street in the shopping center. This Double-crested Cormorant below is pretty young; note the pale brown colors on breast and belly.

Double-crested Cormorant (Ray Juncosa 5/28/23)

The Great Egret below is currently breeding, as the facial skin is green.

Great Egret, breeding (Ray Juncosa 5/28/23)

Great Blue Heron, getting ready to leap into the air (Chris Tosdevin 5/28/23)

Four of the five Canada Geese present. They’ve been breeding at the lagoon on the sandy brushy islands for at least the past three years. One pair this year, but there were three pairs one year. (Left: Ray Juncosa; Right: Chris Tosdevin, 5/28)

Quiz time! What species are the two birds below, both seen today at the lagoon? They may be same or different species. Answer below the trip list.

Chris Tosdevin both photos, 5/28/23

Our one and only shorebird species today, the Killdeer, which breeds at the lagoon. (Chris Tosdevin 5/28/23)

Birds new for the Season: Eurasian Collared-Dove, Bonaparte’s Gull, Dark-eyed Junco, Wilson’s Warbler.

Male Allen’s Hummingbird. When the light isn’t at the proper angle, the structural colors of the gorget disappear. (Chris Tosdevin 5/28/23)

Malibu Lagoon on eBird as of 6-03-23: 6895 lists, 319 species

Many thanks to photographers: Ray Juncosa & Chris Tosdevin

Young Heermann’s Gulls were the third most common species at the lagoon today.
(Chris Tosdevin 5/28/23)

Upcoming SMBAS scheduled field trips:

  • Mt. Piños Birds & Butterflies; Uncertain, Sat Jun 17, 8am. Call/email if coming.
  • Malibu Lagoon, Sun Jun 25, 8:30 am. No reservations or Covid card required.
  • Malibu Lagoon, Sun Jul 23, 8:30 am. No reservations or Covid card required.
  • Malibu Lagoon, Sun Aug 27, 8:30 am. No reservations or Covid card required.
  • These and any other trips we announce for the foreseeable future will depend upon expected status of the Covid/flu/etc. pandemic 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.

It may look like a weird Red-winged Blackbird, but it’s a juvenile Black Phoebe. (Chris Tosdevin 5/28/23)

The next SMBAS Zoom program: TBA. Tuesday, 3 Oct. 2023, 7:30 p.m.

The SMBAS 10 a.m. Parent’s & Kids Birdwalk restarted April 23. Reservations for groups (scouts, etc.) necessary, but not for families.

Song Sparrow (Chris Tosdevin 5/28/23)

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

Prior checklists:
2021: Jan-JulyJuly-Dec 2022: 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 Femi Faminu, Chris Lord, Ruth & Chris Tosdevin and others for their contributions to this month’s checklist.

The species lists below is irregularly re-sequenced to agree with the California Bird Records Committee Official California Checklist as updated 4 Feb 2023. If part of the chart’s right side is hidden, there’s a slider button at the bottom of the list.
[Chuck Almdale]

Malibu Census 2022-2312/251/222/263/264/235/28
Temperature65-7249-5753-5557-6057-6661-62
Tide Lo/Hi HeightH+6.59H+6.81L+0.81L+0.28L-.041L+0.81
 Tide Time095008580911080006371131
1Canada Goose 42645
1Cinnamon Teal  1   
1Northern Shoveler  7   
1Gadwall162658422417
1American Wigeon8 4   
1Mallard62032121512
1Green-winged Teal3815265  
1Redhead   3  
1Surf Scoter3162232
1Bufflehead11105   
1Common Goldeneye 2    
1Hooded Merganser51    
1Red-breasted Merganser7632  
1Ruddy Duck42 8   
2Pied-billed Grebe52112 
2Horned Grebe1     
2Eared Grebe5     
2Western Grebe1840806 
7Feral Pigeon6165618
7Eurasian Collared-Dove     2
7Mourning Dove  2122
8White-throated Swift   5  
8Anna’s Hummingbird21  1 
8Allen’s Hummingbird 23321
2American Coot1303873376 
5Black-bellied Plover5143623  
5Killdeer11412544
5Semipalmated Plover    14 
5Snowy Plover 1616 1 
5Whimbrel9722516 
5Marbled Godwit2318172  
5Ruddy Turnstone263   
5Sanderling2735322  
5Dunlin    2 
5Least Sandpiper192227 19 
5Western Sandpiper4   30 
5Willet1515972 
6Bonaparte’s Gull     3
6Heermann’s Gull85273380152
6Short-billed Gull  1   
6Ring-billed Gull5536404612012
6Western Gull684938265072
6California Gull45013302379560 
6Herring Gull 212  
6Glaucous-winged Gull 74   
6Caspian Tern   2 2
6Royal Tern 21413 3
6Elegant Tern   90630305
6Black Skimmer  3   
2Red-throated Loon 1 1  
2Pacific Loon   11 
2Common Loon   21 
2Brandt’s Cormorant  1 128
2Pelagic Cormorant161233
2Double-crested Cormorant623667265374
2American White Pelican  1   
2Brown Pelican15834315962655168
3Great Blue Heron52 2 1
3Great Egret322212
3Snowy Egret35166213
3Black-crowned Night-Heron1     
3White-faced Ibis  1   
4Turkey Vulture11551 
4Osprey   111
4Cooper’s Hawk  1   
4Red-tailed Hawk3 122 
8Belted Kingfisher 1    
8Nuttall’s Woodpecker 1    
4American Kestrel1     
4Merlin1     
4Peregrine Falcon    1 
9Cassin’s Kingbird1 11  
9Pacific-slope Flycatcher    1 
9Black Phoebe233216
9Say’s Phoebe  1   
9California Scrub-Jay11    
9American Crow31127643
9Common Raven 212 2
9Northern Rough-winged Swallow  2665
9Barn Swallow   141530
9Cliff Swallow  243254
9Bushtit15143328
9Wrentit21  11
9Ruby-crowned Kinglet121   
9Cedar Waxwing   12  
9Blue-gray Gnatcatcher 1    
9House Wren 1  2 
9Marsh Wren 1    
9Bewick’s Wren   1  
9Northern Mockingbird    1 
9European Starling 69 23
9Hermit Thrush 1    
9House Finch16965713
9Lesser Goldfinch 410525
9Dark-eyed Junco     1
9White-crowned Sparrow16122512  
9Song Sparrow 455710
9California Towhee133153
9Hooded Oriole    11
9Red-winged Blackbird812 2 4
9Brown-headed Cowbird    13
9Great-tailed Grackle   642
9Orange-crowned Warbler1 1311
9Common Yellowthroat12431 
9Yellow-rumped Warbler (Audubon’s)15627  
9Townsend’s Warbler1     
9Wilson’s Warbler     1
Totals by TypeDecJanFebMarAprMay
1Waterfowl13685152924636
2Water Birds – Other363434343212739253
3Herons, Egrets & Ibis44209626
4Quail & Raptors617851
5Shorebirds16116618044884
6Gulls & Terns6581453341277940549
7Doves61677312
8Other Non-Passerines253831
9Passerines84961289989106
 Totals Birds1460227611707531915968
        
 Total SpeciesDecJanFebMarAprMay
1Waterfowl9911744
2Water Birds – Other878994
3Herons, Egrets & Ibis433323
4Quail & Raptors413341
5Shorebirds999681
6Gulls & Terns479857
7Doves112223
8Other Non-Passerines141221
9Passerines152018202020
Totals Species – 107556164605644

Photo Quiz Answer: Left – Black Phoebe, Right – Northern Rough-winged Swallow.
Among other differences, the swallow’s wings are nearly as long at the tail; not so with the phoebe.