Exploring Nature in the San Francisco Bay Area

Pelagic Birding for Beginners

This is a guest post from the Golden Gate Audubon Society. Read more from their blog, and see more Glen Tepke pelagic bird photos, at: http://goldengateaudubon.org/blog-posts/pelagic-birding-for-beginners/
H

ave you ever seen an albatross? Do you want to have the pleasure of spotting their distinctive profile, tilting and soaring above the wave crests, flying without flapping? Articles about the physics of albatross flight are still being published in the 21st century, but you don’t have to master the physics to appreciate the poetry. Do you want to see shearwaters perform their graceful ballet?

Then you must go sea-birding.

There’s a great variety of birds that spend most of their lives on the open ocean, some never venturing further in than the continental shelf.

We’re fortunate in the Bay Area to have access to good day-long pelagic birding trips. (Pelagic comes from the Greek word for sea, pelagos.) I usually do one or two a year, with August to October being the months I consider most rewarding for a beginning sea birder.

My recommendation for a first trip is to go out from Monterey Bay. Because of the submarine canyon that extends out from Moss Landing, there is deep, cold water relatively close to shore. The cold water upwellings bring food that attracts pelagic birds, dolphins and whales. At its deepest, the canyon bottom is almost 12,000 feet below the water’s surface. You’ll see wildlife off and on all throughout the trip. There are also great trips out of Half Moon Bay. I was thrilled, and privileged, to see a pair of Marbled Murrelets swimming in the ocean on a trip that went south along the coast from Half Moon Bay to look for them.

If the weather and wind cooperate, pelagic trips go out past the continental shelf, to where the albatross live and Red and Red-necked Phalaropes, shearwaters, and the elusive petrels and storm-petrels spend the winter or migrate through.

SE Farallon Island
Southeast Farallon Island. (Photo courtesy Golden Gate Audubon)

The Farallon Islands

The Farallon Islands are a destination for many pelagic birding trips, and for Oceanic Society whale-watching trips in the summer and fall. I think that anyone who loves the Bay Area and its natural history should not only learn about but also see the Farallones.

Late July and early August are prime times for viewing birds, as the young of burrow-nesting birds such as Tufted Puffins will be fledging and the adults will still have colorful plumage before they molt. Many of the birds that nest on the Farallones are colonial nesters, since they don’t have to defend a territory to protect their food sources. And many of them use burrows or shallow cavities, so getting a good look at them can be a challenge.

The Farallon Islands host an important breeding colony of endangered Ashy Storm-Petrels, but day-boat birders won’t get to see them since they only venture out at night, and not even then if the moon is close to full. The same is true of shearwaters in breeding season.

On a Farallones trip, you’ll get fantastic views of San Francisco and the Marin Headlands. Passing under the Golden Gate Bridge, you’ll see Common Murre dads and their chicks in late summer and early fall. The drawback of a Farallones trip, if it can be called that, is the 27-mile distance from San Francisco. Once you’ve left Point Reyes National Seashore behind, you may not see many birds or marine life until you reach the islands.

sooty shearwaters
Sooty shearwaters. (Photo by Glen Tepke)

An amazing band of protected waters

The National Marine Sanctuaries are treasures protected for us and for future generations, for a range of wildlife from the tiniest ocean-going animals up through whales, and for the birds that migrate through or spend large amounts of time on the open ocean. The federally-protected areas off of San Francisco include Cordell Bank (which you can visit with the Point Reyes National Seashore Association), the Gulf of the Farallones, which is a large area around the islands, and Monterey Bay. In addition, the State of California has set aside many other marine areas with various protections.

Laysan albatross
Laysan albatross. (Photo by Glen Tepke)

Chumming

Chumming, having a crew member toss bits of popcorn over the stern and trail fish oil into the water, really does bring in albatross and shearwaters. These birds can smell the fish oil form a long way off.
Chumming can’t be a bird-friendly thing, even if the birds that respond to chum are scavengers. After all, popcorn isn’t at all nutritious.
Chumming is prohibited in protected waters.  The Oceanic Society has always had a strict no-chumming policy. Other trip leaders have chummed outside of protected waters in the past, but practice is evolving in favor of observing the birds with as little disruption of their natural behavior as possible.  I’m interested to see what happens this summer and if trip leaders address this issue.
Birders on a trip with Shearwater Expeditions. (Photo courtesy Debi Shearwater)
Birders on a trip with Shearwater Journeys. (Photo courtesy Debi Shearwater)

Who to go with?

Alvaro’s Adventures, Shearwater Journeys, and the Oceanic Society all offer discounts to Golden Gate Audubon Society members. I’ve been out with all of them.

The advantage of going out with Alvaro Jaramillo or Debi Shearwater is that the trip is all about the birding. On their trips, they often tell the skipper to “stop the boat” so that everyone can observe a bird, or they direct the skipper to try to get closer to a briefly-glimpsed petrel.

On the other hand, you’ll learn more about the natural and human history of the Farallon Islands, and spend more time there, on a trip with the Oceanic Society, whose Farallon trips run from May to November. You can board in either Sausalito (where the boat harbors) or San Francisco’s Marina Yacht Harbor. If you’re coming from the East Bay, I recommend boarding in Sausalito; parking is easier, and the cruise across the bay is spectacular. The introduction and welcome talk happen in San Francisco, where the naturalist boards. Some but not all of their trips include a guide who is an expert birder; ask about this when booking a trip.

northern fulmar
Northern fulmar. (Photo by Glen Tepke)

Worried about seasickness?

If you want to try wildlife watching from a boat without committing to a daylong voyage to the edge of the continental shelf, consider a half-day whale watching trip out of Monterey or Half Moon Bay.

To maximize your chances of avoiding seasickness, follow the usual advice. Take a seasickness prevention medication one to two hours before your boat departs. Cyclizine is supposedly less sleep-inducing than meclizine. Don’t consume much alcohol the evening before, get enough sleep, eat something for breakfast, but not a huge meal with a lot of fat.

(You can stay near your harbor the night before. The Monterey hostel has rooms for small parties as well as beds in dorms, and is ideally located, even with a parking lot. You can bring your favorite breakfast food and prepare it in the kitchen. There’s also a hostel at the Point Montara Lighthouse for Half Moon Bay trips.)

tufted puffin
Tufted puffin. (Photo by Glen Tepke)

Other rewarding ways to bird on the water

Not quite ready to try birding on the open ocean? Consider birding on the calmer waters of the Bay or the Delta!

Golden Gate Audubon sponsors several wonderful trips with Dolphin Charters that are great opportunities to see water birds in action. There’s a boat trip on the Bay, usually in November, a trip on the Delta, usually in February, and a trip up the Napa River in March. All three trips visit habitat you can only see from a boat. Check our Field Trips web page for dates and details. Or sign up for our free monthly Field Trips e-newsletter to find out about these and other GGAS trips.

There are also independently-operated birding-by-kayak trips on Tomales Bay and Elkhorn Slough.

Adventure and great bird sightings await you!

Maureen Lahiff grew up in the Midwest, where she became fascinated with waterbirds of the Great Lakes.  The shorebirds and waterbirds on the Bay, the Pacific Coast, and open water are all a constant delight.  She co-teaches a Golden Gate Audubon waterbirds class with Linda Carloni in November: See the GGAS Classes page for details. 

Ask the Naturalist: Wall-to-Wall Blue Jays?

Q: I  live in North Berkeley. Over the years I’ve noticed fewer blue jays and more (and more!) crows and ravens. In the last few days, it’s been wall-to-wall blue jays. What’s going on?  — Peter B., Berkeley

A: (Provided by Ilana DeBare, Golden Gate Audubon)

Peter,
You’re not seeing Blue Jays, which are East Coast birds. If you’re seeing blue-colored jays with a peaked cap on their head, they are Steller’s Jays. If they have rounded heads without a peak, they are Western Scrub-Jays.

The local population of both species seem pretty stable. Since 1999, the Oakland Christmas Bird Count total for Steller’s Jays has fluctuated between 195 and 539. For Scrub-Jays, between 382 and 750.

The 2013 Oakland CBC tallied 446 Steller’s and 663 Scrub-Jays in its 10-mile circle, which includes Berkeley. That’s nowhere near as many as crows (1224) but still a healthy number.

So on an areawide level, they are not being chased or crowded out by crows.

I can’t say why you’ve been deluged with jays recently, but maybe they found a particularly tasty food source. Like the crows who are also in the corvid family, jays are very intelligent birds. They eat many types of insects and small animals. So it could be anything… maybe a bunch of caterpillars all coming out at the same time, or a particular kind of berry ripening.

>> Looking for local population trends over time for bird species? Download  historical CBC records from the National Audubon Society site at: netapp.audubon.org/CBCObservation/

>> Contribute to future bird data by joining Golden Gate Audubon’s 2014 Oakland Christmas Bird Count (CBC) on Sunday, December 14 or the San Francisco CBC on Tuesday, December 30. It’s free, and open to beginning as well as experienced birders.

 

 

Counting Crows: Why are there So Many?

“Why are there so many darn crows in Berkeley these days?”

We get that question a lot at Golden Gate Audubon, and the Berkeleyside editors get it too.

It’s not just Berkeley. Crows are on the increase throughout the Bay Area, as are their larger and deeper-voiced cousins, ravens.

Back in the 1980s, Golden Gate Audubon members typically found between 30 and 90 American Crows each year in our Oakland Christmas Bird Count, which includes Berkeley. We typically found fewer than ten Common Ravens.

Since 2010, however, the count has turned up over 1,100 crows and 170 to 300 ravens each year.

“Crows have gone from being very uncommon to common to abundant,” said Rusty Scalf,  a Golden Gate Audubon birding instructor who lives in Berkeley. “Ravens used to be unheard of in the city, but now they’re all over the place.

Photo: Elaine Miller Bond
Photo: Elaine Miller Bond

If you’ve seen hundreds of crows flapping and cawing in a single tree — a murder of crows in fact — you might think that 1,100 crows is an understatement, and Berkeley is on the verge of being taken over à la Hitchcock by these bold, loud creatures. You might join the many bird lovers who accuse crows of driving down local songbird populations by stealing and eating their eggs.

But on both these counts, crows get a bum rap. The real crow story is more complicated.

Crows are intensely social and intelligent birds that, like humans, maintain both a family life and a community life.

During breeding season – spring and summer – they spend time with their family, building a nest and raising young on a defined territory. Adult crows usually mate for life. Juvenile crows stick around for several years and help their parents feed the nestlings. (Don’t you wish your teenagers would do that?)

In the winter, on the other hand, crows often come together for the night in huge colonies. Around sunset, they gather at a staging area such as a big tree, calling and flapping and chasing each other. Then they fly together to another tree to roost for the night.

A raven: the larger, deeper voiced cousin of the crow, also on the increase locally. Photo: Elaine Miller Bond
A raven: the larger, deeper voiced cousin of the crow, also on the increase locally. Photo: Elaine Miller Bond

If you’ve had one of those jaw-dropping “is this Hitchcock?” moments, you may have been glimpsing one of these winter evening roosts. But if you think 50 or 100 birds in one tree is a lot, consider this: Auburn, New York had groups of 25,000 crows in a single roost as far back as the 1930s.

And Fort Cobb, Oklahoma, had one crow roost in 1972 with more than 2 million birds – enough to rival the Passenger Pigeon flocks that used to darken midwestern skies before they went extinct a century ago.

“They do a lot of chasing and calling and preening in these groups, the function of which is not readily apparent,” said Kevin McGowan, a crow expert at the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology. “I think of them potentially as singles bars, crows going in and trying to find a mate.”

According to McGowan, crows’ negative reputation as nest predators is largely undeserved.

Yes, crows do feed on songbird eggs. But studies have shown that crows play a relatively small role in nest predation.

“There are studies that put cameras into nests and watch for predators,” McGowan said.  “The main nest predator is almost always squirrels and snakes. Then come mammals like raccoons and possums, then jays, raptors, cowbirds and mice. Crows are way down on the list.”

According to McGowan, the spread of crows and ravens into urban areas like Berkeley probably has a variety of roots:

  • Crows happily devour many kinds of human debris, such as French fries and other fast food scraps.
  • Their main predator, the Great Horned Owl, is relatively scarce in cities. Plus city street lights help crows spot and evade owls at night.
  • Cities tend to be 5 to 10 degrees warmer than the surrounding countryside since sidewalks and buildings absorb heat. That’s a boon for birds in winter.
  • On top of this, crows and ravens were added in 1972 to the list of species protected under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918. That meant farmers could no longer shoot them as pests – and so the birds gradually learned to be less leery of people.

And while West Nile virus took a heavy toll on crow populations back east over the past 15 years, it doesn’t seem to have significantly hit Bay Area birds.

Crows’ and ravens’ adaptability has been aided by the fact that they are some of the smartest birds around. Crows recognize individual human faces, and will respond with hostility to someone who has threatened their nest on past occasions. They make and use tools – for instance, pulling off a sliver of wood to poke a yummy spider out of a crevice.

(And don’t forget that viral YouTube video of a Russian crow making a plastic lid into a rooftop sled. Although, really, couldn’t the crow just be trying to peck crumbs from the lid and sliding by accident?)

Right now, we’re entering the start of nesting season. So for the next few months, you’ll be less likely to see giant crow gatherings in large trees at dusk. Instead, you may find a group of five or six crows hanging out in your yard. John Marzluff, a crow researcher at the University of Washington, found that suburban nesting pairs tend to defend territory stretching across two backyards – that’s one crow family for every other house.

Photo: Elaine Miller Bond
Photo: Elaine Miller Bond

Don’t want crows in your yard?  You can try banging pots to scare them away, but you’ll need to do this consistently. And it’s probably not worth making a scarecrow: Crows are too smart to be deceived for more than a day or so.

“The best thing is to change your attitude,” McGowan said. “Those crows in your yard aren’t a mob. They’re not a gang. They’re probably a family. And they’re very beautiful if you look at them.”

Some Corvid facts:

Crows and ravens are members of the corvid family, along with jays and magpies. Our local species are American Crows and Common Ravens.

Ravens are larger than crows, but that won’t help you identify them unless a crow has helpfully chosen to sit right next to a raven. Instead, look for the larger, heavier beak on the raven and the shaggy “beard” of feathers on its throat. The raven’s voice is deep and croaky, while the crow has a higher-pitched caw. In flight, a crow’s tail has a flat or slightly rounded end while a raven’s tail ends with a v-shaped wedge.   Easy memory aid: Raven is spelled with a “v,” and has a v-shaped tail.

Learn more:

Learn about Bay Area birds: come on one of Golden Gate Audubon’s free bird walks.

This article was originally published on Golden Gate Birder. Ilana DeBare is Communications Director for Golden Gate Audubon Society. She is working on a novel.

Elaine Miller Bond is the author/illustrator of Affimals: Affirmations + Animals and the newly published Dream Affimals, from Sunstone Press. She is also the photographer for the upcoming book, The Utah Prairie Dog.

Editor’s Note: Berkeleyside, the online news site serving the city of Berkeley, recently asked us about the increase in crows there. Here’s the article we wrote for them.

New Record for San Francisco Christmas Bird Count?

About 120 birders fanned out across the 15-mile diameter of the San Francisco Christmas Bird Count circle on Friday and set what could be a new record for the number of species in the SF count — 183.

That’s of course a preliminary number. It could change as count compilers Siobhan Ruck and Alan Hopkins pour through the data, and as more reports from count week trickle in. (It looks like this year’s Oakland species count, which initially had been pegged at a record-setting 184, is being revised down to 182. So, San Franciscans, don’t get too cocky just yet!)

The weather was cooperative — dry and relatively warm. Some birds were also quite cooperative, including a Tropical Kingbird that posed for the South San Francisco count team, and a Burrowing Owl resting on the rocks north of Fort Funston, the first Burrowing Owl sighted in San Francisco in years.

Tropical Kingbird sighted in South San Francisco. Photo by Ilana DeBare.
Tropical Kingbird sighted in South San Francisco. Photo by Ilana DeBare.

But others were painfully absent. Unless they show up on subsequent reports, this year’s count was notable for turning up no Cinnamon Teal, Green Heron,  or California Quail.

The absence of quail — the California state bird — is a particularly sad story. Their numbers in San Francisco have dwindled dramatically in recent years, due to loss of habit and predation by feral cats and off-leash dogs.

Some teams reported low numbers of individual birds in their area, despite the high species count. It will be interesting to see if this is borne out count-wide once the data is tallied — and if so, if it can be attributed to our extremely dry winter.

Among the highlights cited by count teams:

  • Two Snowy Plovers (including one banded bird) at the Presidio, and 24 at Ocean Beach – good news for this threatened species.
  • A Clapper Rail at Heron’s Head Park.
  • Over 2,000 Western Sandpipers at the South San Francisco shoreline.
  • Fifty-four Western Bluebirds in the Crystal Springs area. (But no quail.)
  • A Long-tailed Duck and Harlequin Duck in Pacifica.
  • Gray Catbird that has been spending time at the Arboretum.
  • Two Great Horned Owls at Land’s End for the first time in ten years.
  • Black Oystercatchers that did a spectacular “sky dancing” aerial display at Land’s End.
  • Borrowing a golf cart from the Olympic Club golf course for counting on the course!

This post originally appeared on the Golden Gate Audubon Society’s blog, Golden Gate Birder. Ilana DeBare is the Communications Director at Golden Gate Audubon Society.