Birds that make the heart sing.
A population of sparrows that migrated to an urban habitat inspires awe and joy in Pamela Yeh, who studies them.
A population of sparrows that migrated to an urban habitat inspires awe and joy in Pamela Yeh, who studies them.
Maximus Gallery Curator Linda Miller first conceived an exhibition of America’s lost birds portrayed by early artists and naturalists after reading the haunting conservation narrative Hope is the Thing with Feathers by Christopher Cokinos. “The challenge was finding the art to flesh out the story,” says Miller.
Jamul — At a field in Jamul, a little owl stood sentry beside a pile of rocks, surveying the landscape with luminous, yellow eyes.
https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/news/environment/story/2020-02-10/burrowing-owl?_amp=true
Birdwatchers across the globe will take part in the 23rd annual Great Backyard Bird Count this weekend. The citizen science project helps biologists at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology create an annual snapshot of the distribution and abundance of birds. Each February, millions of birds are counted, and the GBBC is the largest recorded count of global bird populations.
Help science, get outdoors, and bond with the bird mavens in your life over the holiday weekend.
https://www.nbclosangeles.com/the-scene/the-great-backyard-bird-count-takes-wing/2308436/?amp
On February 18th, Barbara will be hosting a fundraiser for the San Francisco Bay Bird Observatory beginning at 6:30 pm at Cafe Zoë (1929 Menlo Ave.), where Barbara’s photos are currently on exhibit. “I’ll be auctioning off the Snowy Egret at the Duck Pond,” she said.
LEE VINING, Calif. — A massive weed infestation on a tiny island at Mono Lake has choked out the nesting grounds that California gulls need to complete a life cycle as ancient as the million-year-old Sierra Nevada ecosystem.
The Bureau of Land Management’s supplemental environmental impact statements ― covering millions of acres of public land in Colorado, northeastern California, Nevada, Oregon, Idaho, Utah and Wyoming ― will still allow enormous new loopholes for fossil fuel development that conservation groups say will doom the bird to extinction.
A growing body of research shows that birds' spring migration has been getting earlier and earlier in recent decades. New research on Black-throated Blue Warblers, a common songbird that migrates from Canada and the eastern US to Central America and back every year, uses fifty years of bird-banding data to add another piece to the puzzle, showing that little-studied fall migration patterns have been shifting over time as well.
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/02/200220141757.htm
From 9 a.m. to noon on Saturday, Feb. 29, Chaffey College Chino Campus is hosting a free Burrowing Owl Festival.