Our seventh year! Many of you living in Butte, Nevada, and Yuba Counties have been

Similar documents
THE CALIFORNIA BLACK RAIL REPORT A NEWSLETTER FOR LANDOWNERS COOPERATING WITH THE CALIFORNIA BLACK RAIL STUDY PROJECT Vol. 2, No.

Peregrine Falcon Falco peregrinus

Habitat changes force waterfowl to flee the coast by large amount

Mt. Mansfield Amphibian Monitoring. Update. For the Vermont Monitoring Cooperative

Long-billed Curlew Surveys in the Mission Valley, 2014

The Adirondack Tremolo

Dead Bird Surveillance

Long-billed Curlew Surveys in the Mission Valley, 2015

Long-billed Curlew Surveys in the Mission Valley, 2017

Survey Protocol for the Yellow-billed Cuckoo Western Distinct Population Segment

Bird And Habitat Scan

McKay Creek National Wildlife Refuge BCS number: 48-19

A.7 CALIFORNIA BLACK RAIL (LATERALLUS JAMAICENSIS

Watching for Whoopers in Wisconsin Wetlands

Migration Math N79. Theme: Natural History. Author: Loris J. Chen Teacher, North Arlington Middle School. Subject Areas Science, Math

Working with wildlife A DAY IN THE LIFE

How to Observe. Access the species profiles using The Plants and Animals link in the Nature s Notebook navigation menu.

Sauvie Island Wildlife Area BCS number: 47-28

Barn Owl and Screech Owl Research and Management

COMPARISON OF WOOD DUCK NEST BOX SUCCESS

I. Northern Spotted Occupancy and Reproduction Patterns.

Title Marsh Bird Habitat Restoration and Management on Private and Public land in Arkansas Mississippi Alluvial Valley

Protecting our Natural Areas from Phragmites and other Invaders

4-H Conservation Guidelines

PART FIVE: Grassland and Field Habitat Management

Bolsa Chica Birds Survey

Atlantic. O n t h e. One of the best parts of fall is hearing the cacophony of honking,

Activity #5: The Tale of Chipilo Protecting our Wildlife-Balcones Canyonlands National Wildlife Refuge

Birding at a Slower Pace - An Holistic Approach to Observing Birds: Why atlasing will improve your field skills AND your birding experience

Current Monitoring and Management of Tricolored Blackbirds 1

Study Questions. to Splendid Fliers. naturalists. Young

I. Northern Spotted Occupancy and Reproduction Patterns.

Migration of Birds MARC

Protocol for Censusing Yellow-billed Magpies (Pica nuttalli) at Communal Roosts

Recovery challenges for the Forty-spotted Pardalote on its island refugia. Dr Sally Bryant Tasmanian Land Conservancy

B IRD CONSERVATION FOREST BIRD SURVEY PRODUCES ADDITIONAL POPULATION ESTIMATES

MIGRATION It s A Risky Journey

Protecting the Endangered Mount Graham Red Squirrel

A REPORT ON EFFICACY OF METHIOCARB AS AN AVIAN REPELLENT IN FIGS AND RESULTS OF INDUSTRY-WIDE BIRD DAMAGE ASSESSMENTS

WMI Update June 1, Partners Update

Silver Lake Glossy Buckthorn Field Report. September-October 2012

Greg Johnson and Chad LeBeau, WEST, Inc., Matt Holloran, Wyoming Wildlife Consultants

Bittern (Botaurus stellaris)

Six Decades of Migration Counts in North Carolina

Coquet Island Sponsor a Rosy box Update 3. The 2018 Season

Acrocephalus melanopogon

Tualatin River NWR and Wapato Lake BCS number: 47-37

Population Patterns. Math 6.SP.B.4 6.SP.B.5 6.SP.B.5a 6.SP.B.5b 7.SP.B.3 7.SP.A.2 8.SP.A.1. Time: 45 minutes. Grade Level: 3rd to 8th

Ladd Marsh Wildlife Area BCS number: 49-3

Field Trip to PATUXENT

Advent 1. Background. Material. Movements. Words. Focus: the prophets. The basket for Advent is on one of the center shelves.

Warner Wetlands / Warner Valley BCS number: 48-31

Camera Trap Reconnaissance of Wildlife in the Napatree Point Conservation Area: Sampling

To provide a more efficient summary of the data collected on the flora and fauna encountered during these ecological assessments, Taylor Computer

Appendix D. MIS and Sensitive Plant Species and their Habitat Associations. Houston Longleaf Project Bankhead National Forest

Research for Management: Burrowing Owls & the Santa Clara County Habitat Plan

BAT. boo-tiful IN A BOX BAT-TASTIC RESOURCES. to make your Halloween event

Outdoor Challenge Badge A day in the countryside Discovery Challenge Creativity Learn about animals

McLane Center and Silk Farm Sanctuary Comprehensive Environmental Education Guide

Assessing the Importance of Wetlands on DoD Installations for the Persistence of Wetland-Dependent Birds in North America (Legacy )

HERON AND EGRET MONITORING RESULTS AT WEST MARIN ISLAND: 2003 NESTING SEASON

Explore. Burnaby Parks & Natural Areas. burnaby.ca. Photo: Paul Cipywynk

Bittern Botaurus stellaris monitoring and research in the UK: Summary of the 2005 season

Oxyura leucocephala East Mediterranean, Turkey & South-west Asia

Final Report to the Audubon Society of Greater Denver. 15 October 2013

Marsh Monitoring Program - Contact and Route Information

2008 San Francisco Bay Shorebird Census

Dormouse (Muscardinus avellanarius)

Note: Some squares have continued to be monitored each year since the 2013 survey.

large group of moving shorebirds (or other organism).

US Army Corps of Engineers Rock Island District

Massachusetts Grassland Bird Conservation. Intro to the problem What s known Your ideas

AERIAL SURVEY OF BIRDS AT MONO LAKE ON AUGUST 24, 1973

Research Background: Students collecting salinity data at a point along the transect. The tall, tan grass is invasive Phragmites.

The Rufous Hare-Wallaby

BP Citizen Science Amphibian Monitoring Program Egg Mass Survey Results

Dartford Warbler Surveys

Technologists and economists both think about the future sometimes, but they each have blind spots.

Alvord Lake BCS number: 48-2

By Jan Welsh and Bob Welsh < w. 1 i

APPENDIX G. Biological Resources Reports

Non-breeding movements and habitat use of Whooping Cranes using satellite telemetry

W I N T E R Wallkill River View. Friends of Wallkill River National Wildlife Refuge 1547 County Route 565 Sussex, New Jersey 07461

2015 population status of the Peregrine Falcon in the Yukon Territory

American Bittern Minnesota Conservation Summary

Santa Clara Valley Habitat Plan

Endangered Species Profile: The Sun Parakeet. By Student Name, Class Period

Long-term monitoring of Hummingbirds in Southwest Idaho in the Boise National Forest Annual Report

Wildlife Habitat Patterns & Processes: Examples from Northern Spotted Owls & Goshawks

VECTOR SURVEILLANCE IN NEW JERSEY EEE and WNV CDC WEEK 23: June 1 to June 7, 2008

General report format, ref. Article 12 of the Birds Directive, for the report

Bald Eagle Annual Report February 1, 2016

Wildlife monitoring in Cyprus. Nicolaos Kassinis Game and Fauna Service (GFS)

2011 Wood River Wetland Yellow Rail (Coturnicops neveboracensis noveboracensis) Survey Report

NEST BOX TRAIL HISTORY

DISCOVERING BUTTERFLIES - for Butterfly, Spring issue

The status of the European Roller in Lithuania

Say s Phoebe Sayornis saya Conservation Profile

Fairfield s Migrating Birds. Ian Nieduszynski

FIRST GRADE FIRST GRADE HIGH FREQUENCY WORDS FIRST 100 HIGH FREQUENCY WORDS FIRST 100

Transcription:

THE CALIFORNIA BLACK RAIL REPORT A NEWSLETTER FOR LANDOWNERS COOPERATING WITH THE CALIFORNIA BLACK RAIL STUDY PROJECT http://nature.berkeley.edu/~beis/rail/ Vol. 6, No. 1 Our seventh year! Many of you living in Butte, Nevada, and Yuba Counties have been helping the unique research activities of The Black Rail Project since we started our field surveys the summer of 2002, assessing the presence or absence of the California Black Rail. Because of your cooperation we ve been able to make repeated visits every year to the same wetland locations, and this has given us an understanding of population trends and dynamics of this species unusual occurrence in our foothill environment. The California Black Rail wasn t supposed to be resident here, but in 1994 we first found that there were individuals and groups living in little wetland fragments throughout the foothills. They had gone unnoticed because of their tiny size smaller than a robin, the tiniest rail in the world and secretive life among the densest vegetation. So we began our annual surveys of wetlands on public and private lands, every year seeking your permission to come onto your property for the brief time it takes to play a few rail calls, listen for responses, and evaluate their persistence in the network of separated patches that makes up their distribution in the foothills. So many of these small wetland, some as tiny as a quarter acre, are on private land that none of our research would be possible without your cooperation. Once again we give you a hearty thank you and hope this newsletter answers some of your questions about our research and what we are finding out. Remember, you can always contact us directly (see last page for contact info) with any question you might have. You can help us by returning the enclosed postcard as soon as possible. If we don t hear from you, we will try to reach you by phone to once again get your permission to come onto your property to check for presence or absence of the Black Rails this year. Your cooperation is advancing our understanding of how creatures live in the fragmented habitats that interact with our own living space in the real world. While most wildlife studies focus on wild places and wilderness locations, we are interested in what is going on in our very backyards. Black Rail Update: The Big Crash of 2007 Last year something very unusual happened: We couldn t find any Black Rails on a very large number of sites. 250 Many of these locations had always had rails in past years. What was going on? 200 The graph at right shows how rail numbers 150 have been fairly constant over the years, with some slight increases in both occupied 100 and unoccupied sites. But last year we saw 50 a sudden drop in occupied sites. One of the important questions we 0 are trying to answer with our research is: How stable is the fragmented distribution of Black Rails over time? From 2002 2006 Number of Sites Proportion of sites occupied by Black Rails from 2002-2007 Unoccupied Sites Occupied Sites 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Year

we monitored wetland sites during the summer months (June-August) and found that the percentage of sites occupied was relatively steady, ranging from 53-67%. While some sites went locally extinct and some sites were colonized, overall the total proportion of occupied sites was relatively high. Then came 2007. We started to notice something strange was going on when some of our best sites with the longest history of occupancy had no rails. One of these newly vacant sites had even had Black Rails for 13 consecutive years. Even though the habitat looked to be in good shape, with plenty of flowing water and dense wetland plants, we heard only the silence of the rails there. By the end of the 2007 season, we discovered that only 28% of the sites that we surveyed were occupied, which meant that approximately half of our sites from 2006 had gone locally extinct! Well, we don t have the final answer yet, but there are several possible causes of the crash. The first possible cause is temperature. The winter of 2006/07 had the highest number of days below freezing of any winter in our survey period. Cold winter temperatures caused hard frost in some wetlands, which might have put thermal stress on the small-bodied rails or inhibited their ability to feed. The second possible cause is low rainfall. The total rainfall for the 2006/07 winter was the lowest on record for our study period. Lower levels of winter rain resulted in less water coming from springs and lower irrigation water availability. We noticed that some of our more marginal sites in 2007 dried up much faster than in previous years. The graph at left summarizes these possible impacts. A third possible trigger of the crash is West Nile Virus, which has caused increased mortality in many bird species, particularly corvids (crows, ravens, magpies) in California. West Nile Virus is spread by infected mosquitoes, and our rails live in marshes where virus carrying mosquitoes are known to be especially prevalent. We tested the blood of several captured Black Rails and found antibodies to West Nile Virus, indicating that the birds had been exposed. While West Nile Virus causes severe symptoms in people in only about 1 in 150 cases, it has taken a devastating toll on numerous California wildlife species. Now the interesting question is: Will the rails recover in 2008? We will be conducting our normal summer surveys from June-August, and all of us are curious to see if the rails bounce back. Our Plans for the Summer 2008 In what areas within a wetland are rails most likely to spend their time? Do they move between wetlands? How far do young rails go when they disperse from the wetland in which they were born? Do Black Rails and Virginia Rails use the same area, or do Black Rails avoid the larger Virginia Rail? This summer, we will be starting to examine the movement and microhabitat use of Black Rails and Virginia Rails. Although we have learned a lot about the patterns of rail occupancy from our repeated annual surveys, there are still many questions that can only be answered by observing these 2

secretive birds. This is difficult because we rarely see Black Rails and Virginia Rails. However, we can capture rails by luring them into walk-in traps, and then attach small radio-transmitters to gather information about their movements. This technique, called radio telemetry tracking, has been used for years to track many different kinds of animals, especially larger species like deer and mountain lions. Advances in miniaturizing electronic devices have allowed scientists to use radio telemetry on ever smaller species. Because Black Rails weigh just 30 grams, we will attach tiny 1.2 gram transmitters. Transmitters larger than this could affect their movement. The transmitters produce a signal for about 6 weeks, and during this time we will figure out the rails precise locations. Virginia Rails are larger, so we can attach longer-lasting 2.5 gram transmitters. This summer, we will figure out how to best attach the transmitters so that they do not fall off and don t affect the rails behavior. We hope to catch and track between six and eight Black Rails and six Virginia Rails. Using this movement information, we can start to answer questions about how Black Rails and Virginia Rails are using wetlands. For example, we don t know whether rails fly to more suitable wetlands when conditions in their home territories deteriorate. Our analysis of Black Rail occupancy patterns shows that isolated wetlands are more likely to become extinct and less likely to be colonized than wetlands close to other wetlands. This indicates that the California Black Rail in the Sierra Foothills may not be successful moving between wetlands. Yet there is evidence that Black Rails are capable of long distance flights. We can use data from radio-telemetry to provide important insight into these issues in order to better understand the habitat needs and sensitivity of Black Rails and Virginia Rails. The photo to the right shows Ben Risk, a UC Berkeley grad student who joined our project last year, modeling the antennae and receiver that will track the rails this summer. The photo below shows approximately what the transmitter and its antennae look like when temporarily glued to the back of a Marbled Murrelet ( a slightly larger version of what we will use on our Black Rails). 3

WHO WE ARE. This research was begun in the late 1990 s by Jerry Tecklin, a Research Associate at the University of California Field Station where he was stationed for sixteen years. For several years the California Department of Fish and Game contracted him to look for Black Rails in the foothills. Over the years, many of you have been contacted by Jerry for permission to enter your property. Seven years ago Dr. Steve Beissinger began to work with Jerry and founded the Black Rail Study Project, the current long-term study we are now doing. He is a distinguished professor in the Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management at the University of California Berkeley, and a nationally recognized leader in studying rare birds and their conservation. Orien Richmond is a Ph.D. student of Steve s in his fourth year in the field, completing his dissertation on Black Rails. We are pleased to have Lyla Hunt, a UC Davis grad and expert bird handler, who will assist Ben Risk (see p.3) with telemetry, and help Elizabeth Hunter, who will be doing most of our surveys. Elizabeth is a U. of Wisconsin grad who has field experience in Costa Rica, Louisiana, and the Great Basin. Look for these fine folks in the field. You can always contact us by calling the Field Station, 530-639-8804; or emailing us at jetecklin@ucdavis.edu, orien@nature.berkeley.edu, or Dr. Beissinger at beis@nature.berkeley.edu. Consider visiting our website: http://nature.berkeley.edu/~beis/rail/. There you will find pictures as well as sound recordings of these birds (look under Links ), and lots of other information. So, here s the June-September 2008 Team Lyla Elizabeth Orien Steve Jerry

5