birds and the salton sea
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Birds and the Salton Sea. An exploration of the importance of the Salton Sea and associated ecosystems to birds: a global and regional perspective Presented to: California Water Dialogue Sept. 16, 2003 Los Angeles Daniel S. Cooper, M.Sc. (University of California, Riverside) - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT

Birds and the Salton Sea
An exploration of the importance of the Salton Sea and associated ecosystems to birds: a
global and regional perspective
Presented to: California Water DialogueSept. 16, 2003Los Angeles
Daniel S. Cooper, M.Sc. (University of California, Riverside)
Director of Bird ConservationAudubon CaliforniaPasadena

Birds and the Salton Sea
Habitat diversity in the Lower Colorado River Valley (“LCR”) ecosystem
Rare vs. rare Defining the Salton Sea avifauna (=
birdlife) Outlook for Salton Sea avifauna, and
what Audubon is doing to help

Key bird habitats of the Salton Sea/LCR Valley (in no order)
Shallow, open water– Salton Sea, northern Gulf of California
Islands Freshwater/brackish marsh
– LCR and tribs.; seeps in large canals; unlined smaller canals Mudflat/Impoundment
– Mainly South End Salton Sea Mesquite Bosque
– Algodones Dunes, Lower Colorado River Valley Cottonwood/Willow Woodland
– Lower Colorado River Valley, Locally in Imperial Valley Agricultural fields
– Mainly Imperial and Mexicali Valleys; locally elsewhere

Rare vs. “rare”
Species formerly common in California, now declining or lost entirely– Generally due to habitat loss– e.g. Burrowing Owl, Mountain Plover
Species formerly absent or in low numbers; now present but still rare– Due to habitat alteration or climate/global change– e.g. Gull-billed Tern
Species never common in California, and only occurring as vagrants– Chased by bird-watchers; of low conservation concern

The Salton Sea avifauna
Lower Colorado River (“LCR”) Endemics “Last Stand” breeders/winterers Winter congregants Summer dispersers Passage migrants Vanishing (vanished?) nesters

Lower Colorado River “Endemics”
Confined to extreme northwestern Mexico, western AZ, southern NV and southeastern CA– “Yuma” Clapper Rail– “Van Rossem’s” Gull-billed Tern– Abert’s Towhee– “Salton Sea” Song Sparrow– “Large-billed” Savannah Sparrow
Clapper RailGull-billed Tern

“Last Stand” Breeders/Winterers
Mountain Plover– 30-40% Global population in
Imperial Valley (formerly widespread)
Burrowing Owl– 70% of California pop. in Imperial Valley– Associated with agricultural fields– 60% of CA population lost in 1980s
Western Snowy Plover– Largest wintering concentration in
interior of U.S.– Major interior-U.S. breeding site

Winter congregants
Begin arriving late July/August – November
Occur in two main roles:– Agricultural fields
Largest agricultural/grassland area in southern California
– The Salton Sea itself Largest and shallowest body of water in California

Winter congregants… (agricultural)
From left: Sandhill Crane, Long-billed Curlew, White-faced Ibis
Bob Miller
One of just 3 crane wintering areas left in SoCal (formerly common)
20K+ curlews wintering each year
40K ibis wintering each year

Winter congregants… (the Salton Sea itself)
David Blevins
Bob Miller
Up to 75% of N. Am. pop. passes through in early spring (from Gulf of CA to Great Basin)
1.5 million birds in winter
“Lost” shallow water lakes: Tulare Lake, Owens Lake, San Jacinto LakeBuena Vista Lake; plus most coastal wetlands south of SF Bay…

Winter congregants… (the Salton Sea itself)
David Blevins
Bob Miller
100+ miles of shoreline
10s of thousands of shorebirds on shoreline and adj. impoundments
30% of Global AWP pop.
“Lost” shallow water lakes: Tulare Lake, Owens Lake, San Jacinto LakeBuena Vista Lake; plus most coastal wetlands south of SF Bay…
Black-necked StiltAm. White PelicanAmerican Avocet

And lots in between…
David Blevins
Bob Miller
Freshwater impoundment at the edge of the Sea (southeast corner)
c. 30,000 Snow and Ross’ Geese
100,000+ other waterfowl
Richard Ditch

Summer Dispersers: north out of the Gulf
Large-billed Savannah SparrowYellow-footed Gull, Brown Pelican
(Looking south)

Passage migrant songbirds
Spring: Along eastern Gulf of California and directly through Salton Trough
Fall: In hills west and east of Salton Trough
Extensive use of native riparian and mesquite
habitat

Vanishing (from CA) species
Harris’ Hawk
Fulvous Whistling-DuckElf Owl

Vanishing (from CA) species
• Elf Owl• Formerly common along LCR – now 1-5 pr. (if still breeds)• Most of habitat cleared for agriculture
• Harris’ Hawk• Extirpated from Imperial Valley c. 1955, from LCR (CA) c. 1965
• Fulvous Whistling-Duck• Formerly (pre-1950) bred throughout southern Calif. wetlands• Fairly common at South End Salton Sea Impoundments until 1990s

Outlook for the Sea
“Do nothing” (Increased salinity/pollutants = fewer fish) Declines in pelicans Unhealthy birds?
– Lower Colorado River continues to dry/degrade “Save” the Sea w/o retaining some agriculture
– No more Burrowing Owl, Sandhill Crane, curlews, etc. Audubon is pushing for maximum restoration of entire
LCR system, including the Salton Sea– Improvement to threatened ecosystems– Reflective of historic conditions– No “net loss” of birds– No increase of exotic vegetation

Thanks!
Audubon California is the state office of the National Audubon Society. Formally established in 1996, it has its own Board of Directors and staff; manages >10,000 acres of centers and lands throughout the state; and raises 100% of its operating funds.