Summer 2003 - Golden Gate Raptor Observatory
Transcription
Summer 2003 - Golden Gate Raptor Observatory
24 P A C I F I C R A P T O R R E P O R T SUMMER 2003 CONTENTS T H E N E W S L E T T E R O F T H E G O L D E N G AT E R A P T O R O B S E R VAT O R Y Summer 2003 HAWKWATCHING 1A: SOFT EYES AND HARD CASH Allen Fish 3 ROBOLURE: HOW WILL IT HAPPEN? Buzz Hull 4 UNDER THE DOUBLE EAGLE Tim Behr 6 Lynn Jesus 11 Allison Levin 14 Buzz Hull 16 Siobhan Ruck 24 SWAINIES OF THE BUTTE VALLEY Kathy Fraser Odell 26 PEREGRINATIONS: DIURNAL RAPTORS OF SAN FRANCISCO Simone Whitecloud 30 ARE REDSHOULDERS HABITAT-SPECIALISTS? THE BANDING GROOVE STRETCHING THE SOUTHERN LIMITS THE COOLNESS OF KESTRELS TRANSCENDS LANGUAGE BARRIERS DONORS 34 VOLUNTEERS 35 AMERICAN KESTREL [JIM LOMAX] COVER: RED-TAILED HAWK [BARBARA SAMUELSON] 2 CONTENTS T H E N E W S L E T T E R O F T H E G O L D E N G AT E R A P T O R O B S E R VAT O R Y Summer 2003 HAWKWATCHING 1A: SOFT EYES AND HARD CASH Allen Fish 3 ROBOLURE: HOW WILL IT HAPPEN? Buzz Hull 4 UNDER THE DOUBLE EAGLE Tim Behr 6 Lynn Jesus 11 Allison Levin 14 Buzz Hull 16 Siobhan Ruck 24 SWAINIES OF THE BUTTE VALLEY Kathy Fraser Odell 26 PEREGRINATIONS: DIURNAL RAPTORS OF SAN FRANCISCO Simone Whitecloud 30 ARE REDSHOULDERS HABITAT-SPECIALISTS? THE BANDING GROOVE STRETCHING THE SOUTHERN LIMITS THE COOLNESS OF KESTRELS TRANSCENDS LANGUAGE BARRIERS DONORS 34 VOLUNTEERS 35 fpo AMERICAN KESTREL [JIM LOMAX] COVER: RED-TAILED HAWK [BARBARA SAMUELSON] 2 SUMMER 2003 D I R E C T O R’ S N O T E HAWKWATCHING 1A n Soft Eyes and Hard Cash Allen Fish like the Golden Gate, spotting raptors can be far from easy. Speed-flappers like Merlins and hill-hugging Sharp-shinned Hawks can be mere blurs or blips in your visual field. Soaring birds, like Red-tailed Hawks and Turkey Vultures, may turn circles at altitudes right at the limit of your visual range. So, how do you spot them? E VEN AT A WELL - KNOWN MIGRATION SITE time. Learn the classic silhouettes for three raptor types: buteo, falcon, and accipiter. Now you are within a fieldmark of a species’ identification—theoretically. For the impatient among us, an alternate route is to stand among people who seem to know what they’re doing and ask “How’d you know what that was?” THE HAWKWATCHER’S TOOLS It may sound obvious, but your eyes—not your binoculars—are your primary tool. Learn to relax them, to defocus them, to let them see the entire range of your visual field. Think of Dustin Hoffman learning to be a gunslinger in Little Big Man. Buddhists call this “soft eyes.” Binoculars are mandatory. Sure, you can pull back and take in the bigger sky of soaring, gliding, and stooping birds of prey, but the essence of watching hawks is to focus in on the bird. You’ll want to see the subtle muscular flexes of tail and wing feathers in response to wind and lift. You’ll want to see the hooked bill, the dangling talons, and the glint of reflection in those all-seeing eyes. There are two guiding principles for buying binoculars: (1) you get what you pay for, and (2) buy the best you can afford. If cost makes you shudder, remember that this isn’t for some football scrimmage that may happen a thousand times an autumn. This is for birds of prey—scarce, quick, furtive, thrilling. When that silvery-blue-backed adult Northern Goshawk pumps its wings across your field of view, you want to drink it with your eyes. You may not see this again for decades, if ever. Stay unfocused and [SIOBHAN RUCK] scan the horizon, scan the sky, and let your focused attention respond to movements—the flutter of a leaf, the wave of an arm, distant cars, a plane. Scan, focus, discard. Scan, focus, discard. Somewhere out there will be a hawk. Scan, focus, hang on. Track the hawk’s flight. Stay with it. Now, without moving your face or eyes, reach down to your chestthumping pair of binoculars and pull them up to your eyes. If you still had the hawk in your eye-view, your eyes should still have them in your bino-view. So, what is the best money-is-no-object, hawkwatching binocular? Easy. Swarovski ELs. They are just a few years on the market, created from the mind-melds of a team of professional birders. Two EL sizes are available: 10x42s, which will maximize your magnification, and 8.5x42s, which will afford you a better field of view, a steadier image, and greater light-gathering for a slight loss of magnification. The tag for either hovers around $1,500.00. Ouch. Did that make you jump? Yes, but think again Is it a bird of prey? Maybe. A good clue is if the bird has a shorter head compared to a longer tail. This trait includes swifts, swallows, and nighthawks as well as raptors, but for the most part it works, eliminating crows, ravens, cormorants, and waterfowl. So now what? Field guide 3 PA C I F I C R A P T O R R E P O R T RESEARCH NOTES of your eyes. Think of what you will see. This is your life; there are no replays. ROBOLURE How Will It Happen? There are many binoculars that cost less than the ELs and still work beautifully for spotting hawks. Each is a tradeoff of cost, weight, magnification, field-of-view, steadiness, and brightness. These are my favorite hawking binoculars for a range of pocketbooks, and the July 2003 cost as listed by Eagle Optics, a superb web-retailer for birding equipment: Swarovski Swarovski Zeiss Nikon Swift Bushnell Nikon EL 8.5x42 EL 10x42 SLC 10x50 Classic Dialyt 7x42 Superior E 10x42 Audubon 8.5x44 Legend 8x42 Action 7x35 n Buzz Hull Feeling that great energy under my wings —I can fly forever with this free ride— twist my tail a little—a little adjustment of my primaries—wait! There’s a chance for an easy meal—I didn’t even know I was hungry—look at that bird struggling down there—all I have to do is glide down there and pick it up—getting closer. Hmm… it’s starting to look a little funny—but all I have to do is reach out —hey, wait a minute—something’s not right—I’m outta here—what was that Frankenstein? 28.9 oz. $1469.00 27.5 oz. $1529.00 41.3 oz. $1329.00 28.2 oz. $919 26 oz. $799 25.6 oz. $355 30.1 oz. $279 24.3 0z. $99 This is a good time to find raptor field guides, with three complementary books currently in print. The Peterson Field Guide to Hawks of North America by Clark and Wheeler (second edition) is the most versatile, with color photos, field-guide illustrations, and descriptions of the raptor species seen north of Mexico, all packed into a typically small Petersonesque package. HO KNOWS WHAT REALLY HAPPENS to initiate a Red-tailed Hawk starting its hard stoop on a RoboLure, or on any prey for that matter? What is the final clincher to make the hawk complete the attack? How many hours have I sat in a blind waiting and watching the process, and how often have I seen the attacking raptor pull out of its stoop at the last second and then just go away? Why? What did it see? Or hear? Or not see or hear? What didn’t work that the raptor didn’t finish the hunt? W Peterson authors William Clark and Brian Wheeler have also produced a larger book, The Photographic Guide to North American Raptors, essentially a slideshow that guides the reader through all the plumage variations of each species. More than a decade ago, birding’s best writer, Pete Dunne, teamed with a then-unknown David Sibley to produce Hawks in Flight—a lively and innovative approach to identifying birds of prey through “jizz.” Jizz (“general impression, size, and shape”) is a kind of gestalt approach that includes shape, behavior, field marks, and intuition as part of the equation toward deducing a Harrier from a Kestrel. Hawks in Flight is specifically geared for use at a hawk migration site, emphasizing the precise shape and action of each flying raptor. As a raptor bander working at a migration trapping station, I want to catch and band every passing raptor. I know that banding is of its greatest value only if I get information about recoveries, and that I will hear of these human–hawk encounters with only 3 to 5 percent of the birds I band. Each raptor that I don’t band is a missed opportunity, perhaps a critical bit of information that I will never know regarding migration routes, or wintering habitats, or human-caused hazards to survival. GGRO Director since 1985, Allen Fish moonlights as the Samsonite Gorilla of birding binoculars. Send yours in today. 4 SUMMER 2003 RESEARCH NOTES Since the late 1980s, the GGRO has committed much time and many resources to developing an effective mechanical lure for trapping raptors. Any mechanical lure will only be worthwhile when its level of success—how many hawks it catches—reaches the level we can achieve with live lures. In the 2001 banding season, we carefully tested RoboLures in contrast to standard lures at one of our four blinds. The study revealed that even our best RoboLures were only about 30 percent as successful at capturing hawks as live lures, even though the two styles of lures caused the same number of raptors to initiate an attack. Our objective is to learn about raptor movements in order to contribute to raptor conservation, and a 30 percent success rate simply is not acceptable. Our usual capture of an average 1,200 raptors annually means that we earn between 30 and 50 encounters (recoveries) annually. If we were only to band 400 hawks in a season, the number of recoveries would drop to less than 20. Another way to look at this problem is to think about the already slow process of data accumulation taking three times as long. How do we get inside these raptors’ heads? How do we learn what they are seeing, hearing, and responding to? Or not responding to? Several years ago we researched available literature about hunting behavior of raptors, about escape and avoidance behavior of prey birds, and about raptor perception. And there is very little out there that is relevant to our problem. So we continue in our blind efforts to create lures that look good to us. We continue to guess what will be attractive to the raptors. And we continue to make little steps forward in our quest for the perfect RoboLure. Our plans for RoboLures in 2003 include: n To field test full-sized RoboPigeons with pow- erful motors and gears that can flap fully spread pigeon wings at top speed over a full range of movement. n n n n n n To test a variety of jacket and vest treatments to see if there might be a color or a texture that will be more attractive to hawks. To continue development of a RoboSnake. To continue the development of RoboBirds with full ranges of motion—wing flap, tail flick, wing folding, head bobbing and turning, hopping, pecking. To continue development of a continually circling flapping bird in the center of a net enclosure. To continue to work with our mechanical owl— RoboBubo—combined with an overhead net. To continue to test “Bird-on-a-String,” a nonelectric Robo that has a flapping action powered by the trapper tugging on the line and causing the bird to “fly” along the front of a mist net. In other words, we are unashamedly shotgunning for a big Robo breakthrough. If this discussion stimulates anyone to join us in our search for an answer, I would love to hear from you. Email me at bhull@parksconservancy.org. GGRO Research Director Buzz Hull banded his 20th season at the Golden Gate in 2003. 5 A WORLD-WEARY ROBOWAXWING BREATHLESSLY AWAITS A NAÏVE AND HUNGRY COOPER’S HAWK. [BUZZ HULL] PA C I F I C R A P T O R R E P O R T 2 0 0 2 H A W K W AT C H R E P O R T UNDER THE DOUBLE EAGLE n Tim Behr B Y W R I T I N G T H I S A RT I C L E IN THE FORM OF A JOURNAL , I hope to provide you with not only a sense of the 2002 season, but also of the progress of a migration season in general. I realize that this may seem to rely inordinately on the numbers, but numbers are the principal product of the GGRO Hawkwatch. The information contained herein was gleaned from the GGRO Hawkwatch Journal, the Hawkwatch Today button on the GGRO website, and my own memories. NORTH QUADRANT SPOTTERS ANSWER KISLING’S FIRST QUERY OF CALIFORNIA RAPTOR IDENTIFICATION (“HOW DO YOU KNOW IT WASN’T A JUVENILE REDTAIL?”) IN THE POSITIVE. [TEAM PHOTO BY DAVID JESUS; REDTAIL BY JIM LOMAX] 6 SUMMER 2003 2 0 0 2 H A W K W AT C H R E P O R T 8/6/02 RAPTOR SIGHTINGS IN THE MARIN HEADLANDS DURING AUTUMN* My season commenced on the second day of our 2-week orientation cycle. I left my Novato home for the Marin Headlands with measures of both hope and trepidation. In 2001, my Tuesday I Team had suffered the tribulations of interminable FOG. That led to our “earning” the Corbaley Cup, a somewhat dubious distinction bestowed upon the Hawkwatch team with the fewest hours of counting during a given season. 2002 Raptor Rate (Hawks/Hour) Hours I arrived at GGRO’s Fort Cronkhite office, where my team met with Allen Fish prior to going up on Hawk Hill, which was blissfully clear. We practiced the quadrant-style counting system for a couple of hours to reacquaint ourselves with the process. In so doing, we were lucky enough to be graced by the presence of a juvenile Bald Eagle. This bird was the second August record for Marin County. Remarkably, the first was by my team in the prior August. Would this Bald Eagle be a harbinger of glories to come, or would it be a curse on this new season? 8/27/02 Beset by one of the foggiest Augusts on record, GGRO’s Hawkwatch teams operated in fits and starts. Long hours were spent looking at raptor slides and waiting for the fog to clear. When not reviewing slides, many of the teams could be found wandering the Gerbode Valley, or joining Steve Bauer and Herb Brandt along Conzelman Road above Kirby Cove in search of a raptor fix. 2002 Raptor Sightings Average 1989–2001 524 511 Turkey Vulture Osprey White-tailed Kite Bald Eagle Northern Harrier 21.10 0.20 0.15 <0.01 2.52 11,046 106 79 4 1,318 6,129 77 43 0 611 Sharp-shinned Hawk Cooper’s Hawk Northern Goshawk 11.16 5.29 <0.01 5,844 2,769 0 3,913 2,110 2 Red-shouldered Hawk Broad-winged Hawk Swainson’s Hawk Red-tailed Hawk Ferruginous Hawk Rough-legged Hawk 1.29 0.34 0.02 23.29 0.06 0.02 677 180 9 12,194 34 12 251 112 3 7,351 19 7 Golden Eagle American Kestrel Merlin Peregrine Falcon Prairie Falcon 0.04 1.28 0.40 1.20 0.02 21 670 208 105 12 17 546 114 89 6 Unidentified 2.59 1,358 1,660 69.93 36,614 23,063 Total * Not to be cited except by permission of the GGRO. 9/7/02 As the fogs of August began to relent in September, the migration season truly got underway. The numbers of Cooper’s and Sharp-shinned Hawks started their annual climb towards the peak of season. Mike Weber’s Saturday I Team was the first to register a 10-species day highlighted by a well-seen Prairie Falcon and by a very early, very distant first Merlin of the season. On one of the occasions that we’d been able to count from Hawk Hill, three Prairie Falcons were the most notable sightings. However, on this Tuesday afternoon, Steve Bauer scoped a long-winged seabird several hundred feet above Kirby Cove. I got it in my scope also, as did other Hawk Hill regulars, and we all puzzled over this wayward seabird for the entire five minutes it was in view and beyond. After much discussion, we concluded that we had seen a Booby of some kind. We were once again reminded that we can only TRY to identify every bird we see. Even with this mysterious Booby sighting, August could not turn to September fast enough. 9/14/02 Lillian Armstrong’s Saturday II Team saw the first Broadwinged Hawk of 2002. Its arrival has historically announced the arrival of the peak of season and this year was no different. Our hawk sightings per hour (hph) 7 PA C I F I C R A P T O R R E P O R T 2 0 0 2 H A W K W AT C H R E P O R T rose from the 50 hph range at the beginning of the month to 88 hph. 9/16/02 The dam broke and the accipiters were “dashing through the fog.” Lew Cooper’s Monday I Team broke the 100-hph barrier with 107 hph. The Sharpies came through accompanied by Broadwings and a Prairie. 9/17/02 I went to bed the previous night with visions of Sharp-shinned Hawks dancing in my head. I dreamed that I arrived the next morning to a crystal-clear Hawk Hill. As I truly made the turn up Conzelman Road that morning, my dreams became reality. I could not get my Tuesday I Team out of the GGRO office and up to the top of the Hill fast enough. Fog-free days around the autumnal equinox are what some of us live for, and I was not about to let us miss a minute of it. WHITE VULTURE REFLECTIONS The first time I saw Moby Vulture was Saturday, October 12, on Hawk Hill, and I was confused. I had been on the look-out for this remarkable Turkey Vulture ever since hearing about Barbara Samuelson and Greg Gothard’s sighting on September 8 of a leucistic Turkey Vulture near Muir Beach—just eight miles up the coast. My curiosity was further piqued by a subsequent sighting from Hawk Hill in late September. Regardless, I was not ready for what I saw. At first, I tried to turn it into a Ferruginous Hawk because a Ferrug was the only raptor I could think of that was that white and that big. But it was not long before I realized it was THE Vulture and all eyes were upon it. The feathering on the back, the wing coverts, and tail were all a very light camel brown; the primaries were quite white; and the head was pinkish with a white bill. It spent several hours wandering around the Headlands with other TVs. Moby’s distinctive plumage provided us with a unique opportunity to study the movements of an individual vulture within the Headlands. If his/her behavior is in any way representative of a local Turkey Vulture (think of the value of telemetry), then many of my own reservations about repeating counts of TVs in our hawkwatch numbers are allayed. I do not believe that we would have recounted the flock it was traveling with more than once that day. Add that to the fact that I saw it on only four subsequent occasions during the course of the season and I am led to believe that we may not be counting the same TVs on a daily basis. The hawks were moving through from the very start of the morning. By 11 AM, the sky was full of hawks and they were crossing the Golden Gate one right after the next. There was little of the balking at the water crossing that we regularly witness at Hawk Hill. Scarcely a moment went by that day when I would focus on a given hawk and not see several more coming in the background. The 905 sightings (151 hph) that we counted that day exceeded my team’s total number of sightings for all of 2001. At the end of the day, we were sore-eyed and tired; but most of all, we were elated. –Tim Behr is that it most likely will happen on the first clear day after the autumnal equinox. The 953 sightings (159 hph) tallied by Dennis Davison’s Sunday I Team did in fact establish the standard for 2002. The 13 species included 345 Sharpies, 22 Broadwings, “tons of Redshoulders,” Merlins, Peregrines, and a Ferruginous Hawk. I was sorry I missed them. 9/29/02 Stefanie Arthur’s Sunday II Crew got the first Hawk Hill view of a local leucistic Turkey Vulture, gradually dubbed “Moby.” Add that to 889 sightings (148 hph) of some 12 species and once again I was sorry to have missed a day. But the intervening days provided some of the most consistently good hawkwatching in my memory for both diversity and volume. The Sharpies just kept coming and I was reluctant to see September end. 10/1/02 My Tuesday I Team had another great day with 590 sightings (98 hph) of 11 species. Along with a Ferrug, we finally saw the first Golden Eagle of 2002. I do not believe that we had ever entered October without having seen a Golden earlier. We figured we were receiving our just rewards after the privations of 2001. 9/22/02 10/2/02 People often ask me at the beginning of the season, “What’s the the biggest day of the season?” My answer Sue Pemberton’s Wednesday I Team hit the season’s diversity jackpot with 14 species. Their five-buteo day 8 SUMMER 2003 2 0 0 2 H A W K W AT C H R E P O R T (Ferruginous, Swainson’s, Broadwing, Redshoulder, and Redtail) repeated a feat accomplished on September 19. Some people attributed this good fortune to Steve Bauer’s apple fritters. Keep them coming. Merlins, and a late adult Broad-winged Hawk. Needless to say, I did not want October to end any more than I had wanted September to end. 11/2/02 10/11—13/02 November started with the continuing buteo push, great diversity, and a touch of comedy. Mike Weber’s Saturday I Team had a spectacular and befuddling day. The 621 sightings (104 hph) of 11 species, including a couple of Peregrines, three Merlins, and a sub-adult Golden Eagle provided the backdrop for one of those bizarre occurrences that forever mark a season. Columbus and Indigenous Day weekend brought crowds and the roar of the Blue Angels. But the hawks flew undaunted by the din. John Boyd’s Friday II Crew matched the 14-species mark that would be high for the season. Saturday the twelfth gave me my first look at Moby Vulture among the nearly 100 hph of 11 species that day. Sunday provided more of the same, with 102 hph of 12 species and the madding crowds. We were standing our vigil on the North Platform of Hawk Hill when we saw a couple of vehicles drive onto the Rifle Range in the Rodeo Valley below us. The driver of one of the vehicles, an SUV, decided that he was going to practice off-road driving by going up and over the historic berms on the Rifle Range. We were appalled and aghast. This fool had apparently not realized the power of the cell phone. We were so annoyed that we reported this jerk to the Park Police, initiating a low-speed chase that culminated in the culprit’s arrest above Kirby Cove over half an hour later. Although the complete story is too long and convoluted for this entry, if you are interested, ask me about the parrot not being loaded and I will tell you the entire saga. 10/23/02 David Jesus’s Wednesday II Crew finally caught a break. After being beleaguered by fog for much of the season, they got their just reward, 2002’s first Rough-legged Hawk. It was their first full day on the Hill. Their 397 sightings of 11 species were a welcome respite. 10/24/02 Fran McDermott’s Thursday II crew had been suffering from that same fog affliction. Their first full day on the Hill produced 560 sightings (94 hph) of 12 species. A dark-morph Rough-legged Hawk and two Peregrines provided several highlights. In fact, one Peregrine came so close I had to put down my frame-filled binocular to get a better look. 11/7/02 The numbers leading up to this date were tapering off in the face of an oncoming El Niño storm. Fran McDermott’s long-suffering Thursday II Crew was scheduled, and would not be denied. As GGRO Banders were leaving the Headlands because of the weather, Fran led her intrepid group to the top of Hawk Hill. During their four-hour stint they counted 116 hawks of six species. It took 50 mph winds and driving rain to dislodge them from the Hill. Their perseverance that day kept the Corbaley Cup from being awarded for 2002. 10/27/02 Stefanie Arthur’s Sunday II Crew was blessed again. A juvenile Bald Eagle took its place among the 740 sightings (123 hph) of 12 species. The Merlin and the Roughleg were no slouches either. 10/29/02 My team’s last trip to the Hill in October was a continuation of the streak of spectacular late October days. The Redtails were all over us, some 285 of them. Interspersed among 629 sightings (105 hph) of 12 species were two Golden Eagles, three juvenile Ferruginous Hawks, five That night, near-hurricane force winds lashed the Headlands, scattering the Hill 88 Blind, as Herb Brandt put it, onto Hills 89, 90, 91…. 9 PA C I F I C R A P T O R R E P O R T 2 0 0 2 H A W K W AT C H R E P O R T 11/17/02 12/7/02 It was November 11 before the skies once again became our friend. Following a comparatively uneventful week, Dennis Davison’s Sunday I Team proved that in 2002, the hawks came ever on Sunday. Having been served up a Harlan’s Redtail two weeks previously, falcons were on the menu this day. Among their 535 sightings (82 hph) there were 19 Merlins, 7 Peregrines, and 8 Kestrels. However, these were the sideshow, as once again the Hawk Hill Comedy Club was open for business. This time the Rifle Range was the stage for a performance artist. This guy was filming himself repeatedly jumping off a stack of hay bales, naked. That was the only thing I did not regret missing on Sundays in 2002. Our final weeks in December rewarded us with several observations of Moby Vulture, and two Harlan’s Redtail sightings. I did not witness the one on Sunday, December 1, but on this penultimate day of the season, we saw a light-morph adult Redtail that carried a mostly-white tail with a black subterminal band and a red tip. Was it a Harlan’s? Or a Harlan’s intergrade? Who can say? It was a beautiful buteo. 11/25/02 EPILOGUE The consistently excellent hawkwatching continued right into our final two-week cycle, a period typically characterized by lavish end-of-season potlucks, and the occasional rare bird. Lew Cooper’s Monday I Team had little time to dine. Hawks were everywhere. This was our latest-ever big flight, with an astonishing 621 sightings (104 hph) of 12 species. Those fantastic numbers did not tell the whole story. A brief look at the numbers over the last ten-plus years reveals that new records were established in many areas, including 69.9 hph and 36,646 total sightings (just surpassing those statistics for 1999). New high counts were established for four species, with 11,046 Turkey Vultures, 677 Red-shouldered Hawks, 34 Ferruginous Hawks, and 9 Swainson’s Hawks. A ten-year high of 12 Prairie Falcons provided us “falcophiles” with a number of great looks. We added the “Sweet Spot” to our ever-growing lexicon of location names in the Headlands. Near-record numbers of eight more species (Osprey, White-tailed Kite, Northern Harrier, Merlin, Sharp-shinned, Cooper’s, Broad-winged, and Red-tailed Hawk) were observed. This all occurred during a season of 524 hours (just off the ten-year average of 523 hours). 12/8/02 Moby Vulture was with us for the last-day-of-the-season bash. It seemed appropriate to me that it was there to usher out this truly remarkable season. Imagine someone calling out a falcon and you tell them it’s a Peregrine that you see up close; but he says, “Oh no, it has dark axillaries!” Sure enough, we had simultaneous point-blank sightings of a Peregrine and a Prairie. Perhaps the moment I regret most was when Herb Brandt caught me with my hands and mouth filled by a sandwich. He had a big accipiter that he suspected was our elusive first Goshawk of 2002. But it got away before we could get an adequate look at it. Damn! Although we had no 1,000-sighting-days in 2002, three times we exceeded the previous season’s high of 884 sightings. We went over 100 hph on 17 occasions, including the latest ever on November 25th . The sole blemish on this extraordinary season was the lack of a Goshawk. But the Sharpies and the Redtails just kept on coming. That Bald Eagle that we saw at the dawn of the season turned out to be anything but a curse!!! 11/30/02 Sometimes it is really hard to get people’s attention— especially with the sumptuous spreads being laid out daily. This was just such a day. Looking north through my spotting scope, I shouted, “Bald Eagle!” Hardly anyone responded until I added, “I’m not kidding!” Later that day, we added a Golden for a rare double-eagle day. Bird Guide Tim Behr has spent ever y waking hour on Hawk Hill for well over a decade, save for fall Sundays, which belong to the Niners. 10 SUMMER 2003 2002 TELEMETRY PROGRAM ARE REDSHOULDERS HABITAT-SPECIALISTS? n Lynn Jesus 13 TH YEAR , in the GGRO Telemetry Program, we attempted to answer a simple question—where are they going?— but the answer was and is in no way simple. Our 13 years are divided into three separate studies. We began in 1990 studying the movements of juvenile Red-tailed Hawks, and in 1994, we began studying Cooper’s Hawks. Those first two species of course showed us dramatically different flight paths and styles. So in May 1998, a group of telemetry-savvy GGRO volunteers met to contemplate, and strategize how we could conduct a multiyear study of the various species that are less frequently banded in the Marin Headlands. F OR THE HENRY ALTORFER RELEASES ORION FROM SLACKER RIDGE, WITH THE SAN During the 2002 tracking season, GGRO banders provided the Telemetry teams with two Red-shouldered Hawks. Each raptor told us its unique story. Each found a distinct place to pass the time, and each required a different radiotracking style. FRANCISCO SKYLINE BEYOND. [DAVID JESUS] like a singular direction, but tracking raptors going north requires auto-bound humans to immediately choose between a route to the east of Mt. Tamalpais (elevation 2,571 feet), or on Highway 1 to the west of Mt. Tam. No single highpoint offers good coverage of both routes. ORION (JUVENILE RED-SHOULDERED HAWK) S EPTEMBER 27, “Orionthe-Hunter” was released from South Slacker Hill not far from the Golden Gate Bridge. It immediately flew east behind Slacker Blind, and then west at a low altitude toward the valley floor, eventually choosing to roost on the south side of Rodeo Lagoon. O Orion found it relatively simple to head north to the east of Mt. Tam and then suddenly turn west. However, our three tracking teams had to “protect the north” from a sprinting raptor, maintain vigilance over the Mt. Tam and central Marin County territory, and cover the coastal route. For several hours, none of the teams picked up a signal. Then, after miles of driving along winding coastal roads, Team 1 located Orion along Highway 1. N THE AFTERNOON OF The next day, at mid-morning, Orion lifted off from the roost tree, drifted over the Marine Mammal Center, and began heading north. Now, traveling north may sound Orion’s place of choice was a riparian area located in the 11 PA C I F I C R A P T O R R E P O R T 2002 TELEMETRY PROGRAM Point Reyes National Seashore, approximately 2.3 miles south of Olema. NPS Rangers from Pt. Reyes were helpful in providing us access to the Bolinas Ridge Trail, as well as to other off-road sites. Orion favored the area to the west of Highway 1—along the Olema Creek and the Rift Zone Trail, and north of the Five Brooks Trail—but was occasionally observed to fly across Highway 1 on short forays. Libby Rouan and Ben Lavender wrote: “We noted several other Redshoulders in the neighborhood and commented on the pristine Redshoulder habitat we were in.” NOMAD (JUVENILE RED-SHOULDERED HAWK) with a bit of wanderlust, the telemetrists chose “Nomad” for the name of the second Redshoulder of the season. After being released from South Slacker Hill at 4:25 PM, Nomad headed east towards Sausalito and found a roost tree in East Fort Baker. H OPING FOR A RAPTOR At midmorning on October 4, Nomad lifted off and began its journey. The teams were well positioned for Nomad’s flight, and the San Pablo Ridge Team became the hub as Nomad flew first north, and then east into the Sacramento Valley. As the San Pablo team tracked and communicated Nomad’s changing position through Marin, Sonoma, Napa, and Solano counties, the two mobile teams tried to keep up, as well as find an occasional highpoint in which to get crossbearings. And then the mobile teams hit the great expanse of the Sacramento Valley. No roost site was identified that first evening; however, late bearings indicated that Nomad was east of Mt. Vaca, somewhere between Vacaville, Woodland, and Sacramento. And what did this “pristine Redshoulder habitat” mean to the telemetry teams? On September 30, Libby and Ashley Sexton reported: “We were busy all day with off-roading, gate-opening, and discussing theories regarding what this bird is doing in its tiny, tiny territory, which it has inhabited for the past 3 days.” This raptor’s tiny, tiny territory within the convoluted coastal terrain meant that the teams were either positioned “close-in” (on Highway 1 or on Bolinas Ridge) recording the micromovements of Orion, or they were waiting on a highpoint (prepared for another macromovement) and receiving no signal. For the next two days, the teams were unable to pinpoint Nomad’s location. All our modes of communication (cell phones, pagers, and radios) broke down. The Sacramento Valley was a broad black hole for communication, and it also lacked useful highpoints for getting raptor signals. The close-in position required frequent recordings of signal location, characteristics, visuals, and other animals in the area. Sometimes the teams even had time to record interesting human interactions, such as this from Cheryl Kraywinkel and Richard Ferris’s journal notes: “Orion stayed put from 0930 ’til we left for the day at 1830. However, we did get a chance to count 83 motorcycles, 27 trucks with horse-trailers, and too-many-to-count drivers all in a hurry to get somewhere more important than where they were coming from.” On both October 5 and 6, two teams remained stationary on distant highpoints, such as Mt. Vaca, Mt. Diablo, or various locations in the Sierra Foothills, while one mobile team tried to close in on Nomad. Only sporadic signals were picked up, and the bearings indicated that Nomad could have been as far east as the Foothills. The teams stayed with Orion for a week, through October 3, when GGRO banders provided us a second Redshouldered Hawk to track. Later autumn tracking found that Orion moved 2.5 miles northwest to an area of similar habitat west of the Bear Valley Trail, between the Mt. Wittenberg Trail and the Meadow Trail. Henry Altorfer also noted that NPS was conducting controlled burns in the area, but it is unknown whether these conditions might have influenced Orion’s move to that location. Our tracking strategy was the reverse of what we used with Orion. Instead of having local teams constantly recording Orion’s micromovements, we had to resort to using three highpoint teams, each receiving only sporadic signals from Nomad. In order to locate Nomad, a local team had to be close enough to pick up a signal across these flatlands. On October 7, we added a fourth team 12 SUMMER 2003 2002 TELEMETRY PROGRAM 2002 FLIGHTS OF JUVENILE RED-SHOULDERED HAWKS Sacramento Shaded area shows approximate range. Exact location unknown Oct. 20, 2002 Oct. 17, 2002 Oct. 7,9,11,12, 2002 Santa Rosa Orion Petaluma Nomad Oct. 10,2002 N Sept. 28-Oct. 3, 2002 Marin Headlands Oct 3, 2002 California Sept. 27, 2002 PACIFIC OCEAN 0 so that there could be three highpoint teams and one mobile team to zero in on the elusive Nomad. Success!! 50 100 miles (i.e., watched) Nomad leaving the grove, flying over the flatlands, sometimes remaining on the ground for up to 20 minutes, and eventually returning to the grove located at Roads 38 and 106. During late-season tracking on October 17, Henry Altorfer determined that Nomad had moved northeast to a group of trees near the Glide Tule Ranch, and on October 20, Henry found Nomad’s evening roost near the eastern end of Road 34. This indicates a drift to the northeast of approximately 4 miles from Nomad’s original roost site over a two-week period; however, both areas have similar flat fields and farmlands. Bearings from the three highpoint teams at 8:44 AM crossed in the area south of Davis and east of Hwy 113. The mobile team scoured the fields, picking up several signals surrounding the area in which Nomad was finally located. By noon, Team 4 was at the intersection of Roads 38 and 106. Later in the day, the teams from Mt. Vaca and the Sierra Foothills came to the Yolo Bypass Wildlife area, just west of the Sacramento Deep Ship Channel, and confirmed Nomad’s location near the intersection of Roads 38 and 106. MAKING SENSE OF SHOULDERS And so in 2002, GGRO’s Telemetry Program can answer the question—Where are they going?—for two more Red-shouldered Hawks. These two “Shoulders” chose entirely different habitats, and required dramatically different tracking techniques. GGRO Telemetrists must be tenacious and patient, creative and adaptable; but in the end, the result is the exhilarating feeling of learning a little bit more about the real lives of the raptors that visit the Marin Headlands each fall. Nomad chose a hangout in the middle of flat grasslands, corn and tomato fields, grazing land, wildlife refuges, and duck hunting clubs! Other raptors in the area included Red-tailed Hawks, White-tailed Kites, Northern Harriers, American Kestrels, and Turkey Vultures. Nomad chose a small grove of old eucalyptus trees that served as an island in the middle of the Yolo Bypass Wildlife Refuge. Hunters from the various duck clubs were extremely helpful in offering us combinations to gates that allowed access onto the private lands. Telemetr y Coordinator Lynn Jesus was recently recognized as the California State Authority on Access Roads to High Places. Thankfully, this is not a governor-appointed position. On October 9 and 11, the teams had visuals on 13 PA C I F I C R A P T O R R E P O R T 2002 BANDING PROGRAM THE BANDING GROOVE n Allison Levin DEAR R EADER : For me, the 2002 banding season started out with the proverbial kick to the head. I took it as a bid for my attention. banders and telemetrists like to talk about. Especially the banders—we take weather very, very seriously. GGRO banding season. John Payne (bander extraordinaire) and I were at the Hill 88 Blind, and it was at the end of a perfect day. Good company, clear skies, and willing hawks when—let’s see, how would the game “Clue” describe it? “The Wind did it, with a Door, in the Marin Headlands Entryway.” Thirteen staples to the head later, I was all fixed up. (And I got away easy—by the end of the 2002 season, that same wind took down the Hill 88 Blind itself, turning it into toothpicks and kindling.) I T WAS THE SECOND DAY OF THE If you ever have a chance to visit the GGRO office (and I hope that you do), pull up a chair and read a few pages of our collective Banding Journal. You’ll find that weather is written about almost as much as the hawks that we lure. To quote: “The amount of morning fog was absolutely insane!” (Siobhan Ruck, September 15) “It was hot.” (Jeff Acuff, November 7) “The day went something like this: hawk, rainshower, hawk, squall, hawk, hail!, hawk, more rain.” (Greg Brown, December 20) “Beautiful day. Very warm in the morning with no wind. Breeze picked up around noon. Lots and lots of RTs – most of which ignored us.” (John Ungar, September 10) And, at the end of one birdless day, bander Ralph Pericoli wrote only this: “The cursed Mind you, this was not a typical banding adventure. Most of the time we are able to keep our blinds year to year to year, and not many banders are sporting Frankenstein hairdos (just me!). I tell you my story not so much for the sympathy (bon-bons can be sent in care of the GGRO office), but because I want to talk about the wind and the sky, and weather in general. It’s what hawkwatchers and A PEREGRINE AND TWO PAIR O’GRINS. RAPTORS ARE JUVENILE RED-SHOULDERED HAWK, JUVENILE PEREGRINE FALCON, PRAIRIE FALCON, AND ANOTHER JUV REDSHOULDER. BANDERS CHRISTINA SHERR, CRAIG NIKITAS, ANN RUFFER, AND DIAN BAHR. (PHOTOS BY DAVID JESUS, EXCEPT FOR CRAIG AND THE PEREGINE, WHICH IS BY GREG GOTHARD.) 14 SUMMER 2003 2002 BANDING PROGRAM South Wind!” Arrrr, matey, and pass me the bottle—or, on second thought, how about one of those cubes of chocolate cherry hazelnut fudge, guaranteed to bring in falcons? Something you won’t easily find in our Banding Journal is much talk about the dedication that we bring—and why we continue to be so enthusiastic through wind, fog, and California’s bitter winter chills. (I think the dampness gets deeper into the bones than even the Midwest’s fiercest.) Like most passions, what motivates each of us is hard to explain. RAPTORS BANDED IN THE MARIN HEADLANDS DURING AUTUMN* Annual Average Totals 2002 1992-2001** 1983-2002 Northern Harrier 47 9 193 Sharp-shinned Hawk 508 387 4903 Cooper’s Hawk 602 493 6796 Northern Goshawk 0 4 Red-shouldered Hawk 39 10 182 Broad-winged Hawk 0 1 13 Swainson’s Hawk 0 3 Red-tailed Hawk 453 340 5845 Ferruginous Hawk 0 0 2 Rough-legged Hawk 0 0 3 Golden Eagle 0 0 2 American Kestrel 61 46 631 Merlin 26 14 174 Peregrine Falcon 1 4 41 Prairie Falcon 3 1 17 Total 1,741 1,306 18,809 them, taking them in hand, measuring and banding and releasing them—completely empties my mind of anything else. I am transported, and if the question is “to where?” I’ll tell you the answer: Here and now. I find my Flow. Or, as we hipsters liked to say, “It puts me in the groove.” In the groove, too much thinking can get in a person’s way. For me, being captivated by the here-and-now is a rare, if cliched, event. And Certainly, we go because of the birds. * Not to be cited except by permission of the GGRO. it is completely satisfying: ** 1992 through 2001 are used for comparison due to similarity But I think that our notes about the of methods for all years beginning with 1992. If I ever did possess any weather also say much about what grace, this is when it would motivates us, more than simply which emerge. Amazing that stepway the wind was howling. Yes, the weather does help ping away from more lofty thoughts can feel so joyous, weave a story into our successes and failures, but the but I think this is what happens to many people in the weather is also something we can point to when we want act of their passion, whether they are fishermen, painters, to say, “Something about what I am doing out here is dancers, mountain climbers or toddlers. It happens to powerfully different.” The weather is, in my estimation, banders as we navigate the elements and depend on our one of the more tangible aspects of a pursuit that is as reflexes and take part in the beauty that surrounds us. transcendent as true besotted love. As it turned out, banding this season was not a typical When I make my early-morning drive to the Marin experience for any of us. In an exhilarating confluence Headlands and a day of hawk banding, I step out of my of Flow among 99 volunteer banders, with some help cozy old Toyota and into an environment that physically from the wind, and—oh yes—the raptors themselves, grabs and grips me. The sky becomes a presence instead it was a banner year of records set. It took all of us to of empty space; it is huge and aggressive. Instead of feelband a record total of 1,741 raptors. This year in particuing cramped in familiar streets and stuffy rooms, I am lar, no matter who banded the 26th Merlin, the swallowed up by deep, sweeping hills; the rough chapar44th Northern Harrier, the 39th Red-shouldered Hawk ral colors and textures and smells that surprise me every (leaving aside the record-matching numbers of Prairie time; and the feeling that I am the intruder while the Falcons, Cooper’s Hawks, Sharp-shinned Hawks, and locals—coyotes, foxes, sparrows, and mountain lions— Swainson’s Hawks)… during this 20th year of the GGRO are assessing me. Having stepped out of my normal life, banding program, it seems that the groove held us all. nothing that I do is routine. Nothing that will happen Landscape Architect & freelance writer Allison Levin coordinatcan be predicted. I pay attention to it all. ed all the off-season bird care for 2003, ensuring her place in the eternal avian groove. Every moment of working with the hawks—luring for 15 PA C I F I C R A P T O R R E P O R T GGRO BAND RECOVERIES 2000 TO 2003 STRETCHING THE SOUTHERN LIMITS n Buzz Hull A S ALLEN AND I REVIEWED THE STATUS OF OUR BAND A second long-distance traveler was recovery #569, a Cooper’s Hawk that was banded on September 8, 2002, by Dian Langlois and recovered at Lake Havasu City, Arizona, on March 17, 2003. This bird traveled at least 600 miles in the six-month period between banding and recovery. recovery reporting, we became painfully aware of the degree to which we have fallen behind in reporting to you. We want to keep all of our volunteer banders and PRR readers informed about what we are learning from the banding data regarding West Coast raptor movement. In the last Pacific Raptor Report band recovery article, Marion Weeks reported the circumstances of 24 encounters of birds banded at the GGRO. Since early 2001, we have received an additional 115 reports of encounters and are clearly falling behind in keeping up with the data. A third recovery, #558, is exciting because of time, not distance or direction. This encounter extends the known survival time for a Sharp-shinned Hawk banded at the GGRO. This female Sharpie was one I banded as a juvenile on September 15, 1995, and was encountered in El Toro, California on January 1, 2003,—seven years and three months later. This is a bird that was reported as “alive, released; band left on bird,” so it’s not done yet. In order to get the information to you in a more timely way, we are streamlining our procedures just a little. As many of you already know, we receive just a skeleton version of the circumstances of each band or bird encounter from the Bird Banding Laboratory. We attempt to verify and also to flesh out each report through correspondence and telephone conversations with the finders. In this issue, we report what information we have to you, and will keep you informed in greater detail of the more interesting and significant encounters as the information becomes available to us. In this article, therefore, you will only get short snapshots of many of the encounters. A fourth recovery, #559, a Red-tailed Hawk banded on December 16, 1988, illustrates one of the difficulties with band-recovery data. We would love to believe that the hawk lived until September 2002, when the band was found. However, a phone call from Russ DeLong to the finder revealed that the band (#1807-07306) was found on a gravelly stretch of beach at Klamath Lake, Oregon, with no sign of the bird or its remains. So, as much as we would like to believe that the Redtail lived to the grand old age of almost 14 years, we have no way of knowing even approximately how long the bird survived. Now that I have prepared you for a short and boring discussion of way too many band encounters, I need to highlight some very exciting encounters that were among the most recent reports from the BBL. By far the most exciting was recovery #579, a juvenile Red-tailed Hawk that traveled from the Marin Headlands where it was banded by GGRO Intern Ben Lavender on October 6, 2002, to Guadalupe in south-central Mexico and was encountered on January 31, 2003. The map distance between the two locations is over 1,500 miles; this is the minimum distance traveled in the period of slightly less than four months. Thanks to volunteers Ann Ruffer and Greg Brown, and especially Marion Weeks, for managing the correspondence that deepened our knowledge of these birds. Juvenile Cooper’s Hawk banded 10/21/00 by William Corning; found emaciated 10/26/00 near Walnut Creek, Contra Costa Co., CA; reported by Susan Heckley, Director of the Lindsay Museum where the hawk was treated. The hawk had esions on both feet, suggestive of avian pox. The GI tract was necrotic and the air sacs were compromised, suggesting a possible fungal infection. 472 16 SUMMER 2003 GGRO BAND RECOVERIES 2000 TO 2003 CANADA Vancouver Vancouver Island Santa Rosa Napa Petaluma 6 Seattle Washington San Rafael Richland 4 4 Portland Oakland Salem Oregon San Francisco 5 Livermore Daly City Bend Hayward 2 2 Medford San Jose California Redding Red-tailed Hawks Reno Lake Tahoe Cooper's Hawks Santa Rosa Sacramento Sharp-shinned Hawks 2 Marin Headlands Modesto 3 2 2 Other species Fresno 2 Number of birds found at location Ridgecrest PA N Bakersfield C IF Lake Havasu City IC Santa Barbara O Los Angeles 2 2 C 0 E 100 A N 50 San Diego Ensenada 17 MEXICO 150 200 miles PA C I F I C R A P T O R R E P O R T GGRO BAND RECOVERIES 2000 TO 2003 GULF OF MEXICO MEXICO Red-tailed Hawks Zacatecás Cooper's Hawks Sharp-shinned Hawks PA Mexico City C Other species IF 2 Number of birds found at location IC O Veracruz BELIZE CE AN GUATEMALA N EL SALVADOR HONDURAS NICARAGUA COSTA RICA 473 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 9/17/00 by Anne Ardillo; found dead 1/19/01 at Pescadero, San Mateo Co., CA; reported by Cameron Stent. 474 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 9/6/00 by Jennifer Zamanian; found dead 1/24/01 at San Rafael, Marin Co., CA; reported by Rosalie Caesari. Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 9/18/00 by David Jesus; found injured 10/8/00 somewhere in San Mateo Co., CA; reported by Chris Sanders. The hawk was delivered by Peninsula Humane Society staff to the Wildwood Veterinary Hospital in Portola Valley with a cracked beak, a hematoma on one wing, and a multiple-fractured left ulna. It was anaesthetized, treated, splinted, put on antibiotics, force fed 2 mice and returned to the PHS, who eventually released it. 475 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 12/8/00 by Maura Eagan; found dead 1/24/01 at Pescadero, San Mateo Co., CA; reported by 476 Elliott Henderson & Joe McEvoy. Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 11/17/00 by Su Corbaley; found dead 1/15/01 along Highway 37, two miles east of Sears Point, Solano Co., CA; reported by David Yerzy. The hawk’s neck was broken; the finder assumed it was hit by a vehicle. 477 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 12/10/00 by Richard Horn; found injured behind a building 12/19/00 at San Francisco, San Francisco Co., CA; reported by Susan Kelly of the Peninsula Humane Society. Susan reported that the hawk “must have hit the building because he had severe head trauma and the upper beak was missing. He was euthanized on arrival.” 478 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 10/3/00 by Daniel Saucedo; trapped 1/1/01 at Novato, Marin Co., CA; reported by Stan Moore. 479 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 12/1/00 by Maura Eagan; found dead 3/7/01 at Boulder 480 18 Creek, Santa Cruz Co., CA; reported by John Robinson. 481 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 12/11/00 by Laurie King; found dead 1/24/01 at the Petaluma P Dumps, Marin Co., CA; reported by Karen Murad. 482 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 12/12/00 by Chris Briggs; found dead 2/27/01 at Sun City, Riverside Co., CA; reporter and finder unknown. 483 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 9/6/00 by Buzz Hull; found dead after being hit by a vehicle 5/19/01 at Napa, Napa Co., CA; reporter and finder unknown. Juvenile Cooper’s Hawk banded 9/22/98 by Mamiko Kawaguchi; trapped at bird banding station 3/4/01 at Coyote Creek, Santa Clara Co., CA; reported by Sherry Hudson, Coyote Creek Riparian Station, San Francisco Bay Bird Observatory. 484 485 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 9/5/00 by Bill Prochnow; SUMMER 2003 GGRO BAND RECOVERIES 2000 TO 2003 found dead 1/5/01 at San Rafael, Marin Co., CA; reported by Stan Moore. Adult Cooper’s Hawk banded 10/3/00 by Daniel Saucedo; found alive but died later 3/15/01 at Danville, Contra Costa Co., CA; reported by Kathy Sostaric. To quote from the report: “Bird fell out of a tree and rolled down a sloping, tiered backyard. Ms. Sostaric went to check bird right away because of dog on premises. Took awhile to die.” 486 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 9/8/00 by Su Corbaley; found electrocuted 4/1/01 at New Cuyama, Santa Barbara Co., CA; reported by Dorothy Tallman of Pacific Wildlife Care. To quote the report: “The bird had severe electrical burns severing most of the muscle off the radius and ulna bones of one wing. The wing was ‘dead.’ The leg with the band was burned through the pad of the foot and the leg was green and swollen. The bird was severely emaciated from the electrocution. Other than that, the bird was in good feather condition. Euthanized on 4/2/01.” 487 488 Adult female Sharp-shinned Hawk banded 10/16/00 by David Jesus; found injured 4/5/01 near Seattle, King Co., WA; reported by Sarvey Wildlife Care Center, Arlington, WA. Juvenile female Cooper’s Hawk banded 09/30/00 by Craig Nikitas; found dead 10/8/00 at San Jose, Santa Clara Co., CA; reported by Roland Itaya. Hawk was found on the ground with “an injury on the right wing” and no clear cause of death. 489 Juvenile female Cooper’s Hawk banded 9/23/00 by Will Corning; found dead 5/7/01 at San Luis Obispo, San Luis Obispo Co., 490 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 10/15/00 by Pat Overshiner; found dead 10/21/01 at Fremont, Alameda Co., CA; reported by Vicky Eggert. CA; reported by Quinn Taubenheim. “The bird was pretty well mangled. At first, I wasn’t even sure it was a bird.” No clear cause of death. 497 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 12/16/00 by Nancy Mori; found dead 4/24/01 at Hudson Vineyards, just west of Napa, Napa Co., CA; reported by Jason Steven Kesner. “Pretty well scavenged. Little flesh on skeleton. Bones bleached and intact but carcass looks like it’d been there a couple of months or more.” 498 491 Adult Red-tailed Hawk banded 12/16/99 by Josh Hull; found dead 4/26/01 at Mason Co., WA; reported by Don Huson. The hawk was found in a field near a Christmas tree farm. “Mostly feathers and dried legs. The band is what caught my eye. The bird may have been there a month.” 492 493 Juvenile female Cooper’s Hawk banded 9/13/98 by Michael Arnold; found dead 10/28/98 about 10 miles east of Forbestown, Butte Co., CA; reported by Robert Cook. The hawk was found on the ground at the west side of a building with several windows. 494 Juvenile female Cooper’s Hawk banded 9/19/00 by Maura Eagan; found dead 9/30/00 at Ridgecrest Co., CA; reported by Crestwood Veterinary Hospital. Juvenile female Cooper’s Hawk banded 9/26/00 by Pat Overshiner; found dead 8/1/01 at Chester, Plumas Co., CA; reported by Pat Horn. 495 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 10/3/96 by Russ DeLong; found live, later died 8/1/01 at Castro Valley, Alameda Co., CA; reported by Rose Britt, Sulphur Creek Nature Center. 496 19 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 11/11/00 by Nancy Mori; found dead 10/25/01 at Issaquah, King Co., WA; reported by Kay Baxter. Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 9/27/00 by Marc Blumberg; found dead 11/29/01 at Alameda, Alameda Co., CA; reported by Timothy Burr, SW Division of the Naval Facilities Engineering Command. 499 Juvenile female Cooper’s Hawk banded 9/25/95 by Jon Hunt; found injured 12/14/01 at San Diego, San Diego Co., CA; reported by Project Wildlife’s Raptor Team. 500 Juvenile female Cooper’s Hawk banded 9/8/97 by Karen Scheuermann; found dead 12/14/01 at Downey, Los Angeles Co., CA; reported by California Department of Fish and Game, Chino. 501 502 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 9/8/97 by Kirk Bates; found live 12/17/01 at Richland, Benton Co., WA; reported by Heidi Brunkel. Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 9/5/00 by Daniel Saucedo; found dead 12/20/01 at Leggett, Mendocino Co., CA; reported by Richard Anderson. 503 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 11/25/99 by Kathy Brazee; found dead by injury 1/13/02 at Atherton, San Mateo Co., CA; reported by Jennifer Stokley. 504 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 12/13/99 by Kimberly Holbrook; found dead 1/25/02 at Gold Ray Dam, Jackson Co., OR; reported by William Kuenniger. 505 PA C I F I C R A P T O R R E P O R T GGRO BAND RECOVERIES 2000 TO 2003 Juvenile American Kestrel banded 8/24/99 by Greg Gothard; trapped and released 2/8/02 at San Rafael, Marin Co., CA; reported by Stan Moore. 506 507 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 11/25/94 by Brendan White; found dead hit by car 1/20/02 south of Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz Co., CA; reported by Gretchen Hurley. 508 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 11/25/00 by David Hickey; found dead hit by car 3/8/02 near Williams, Colusa Co., CA; reported by Brett Gomes. Juvenile female Sharpshinned Hawk banded 9/23/01 by Anne Ardillo; found dead 9/30/01 at Lagunitas, Marin Co., CA; reported by Janelle Fazackerley. 509 Juvenile male Sharp-shinned Hawk banded 9/26/01 by Claire Gallagher; found dead 12/27/01 at Scotts Valley, Santa Cruz Co., CA; reported by Paul Vernier. 510 Juvenile female Sharpshinned Hawk banded 9/23/01 by Joe Burns; found dead by injury 11/12/01 near Long Beach, Los Angeles Co., CA; reported by David Thraen. 511 Juvenile male Cooper’s Hawk banded 9/3/01 by Allison Levin; found live 2/4/02 near Talmage, Mendocino Co., CA; reported by Peggy Seaman, Crittercare Wildlife Rescue, Ukiah. 512 Juvenile male Cooper’s Hawk banded 10/13/01 by Joe Foo; found dead from window strike 10/16/01 near Belvedere, Marin Co., CA; reported by Lauren Mack. 513 Juvenile female Cooper’s Hawk banded 10/7/01 by Vasken Kevorkian; found live, a possible window strike 10/13/01 at Ventura, Ventura Co., CA; reported by Pete 514 RANDY BREAUX LECTURES ON THE FINE POINTS OF ACCIPITER IDENTIFICATION AIDED BY A JUVENILE COOPER’S HAWK. [BARBARA SAMUELSON] Triem, Ojai Raptor Center. Diagnosed as having “moderate Central Nervous System deficit indicated by partially closed left eye and vestibular nystagmus; repeat motions of head 20-degrees from centerline to right.” Treated with dexamethasone for nystagmus. Force fed. Slated for release around Halloween 2001. 515 Juvenile male Cooper’s Hawk banded 9/16/01 by Claire Gallagher; found dead 10/21/01 at Sweetwater National Wildlife Refuge, San Diego Co., CA; reported by Chula Vista Nature Center. 516 Juvenile female Cooper’s Hawk banded 10/20/01 by Craig Nikitas; found dead 11/3/01 at Comptche, Mendocino Co., CA; reported by Jennifer Dishon. 517 Juvenile female Cooper’s Hawk banded 10/5/01 by JD Durst; found dead 10/19/01 near Newark, Alameda Co., CA; reported by Manual Silva. 518 Juvenile female Cooper’s Hawk banded 9/22/01 by Anne Ardillo; band read on live bird 20 in field 12/2/01 near Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz Co., CA; reported by Glenn Stewart. 519 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 9/16/01 by Christina Althoff; found dead 3/5/02 at Petaluma, Sonoma Co., CA; reported by Steve Coffin. 520 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 11/29/01 by Buzz Hull; found dead 2/4/02 near San Gregorio, San Mateo Co., CA; reported by David Stariha. 521 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 8/21/01 by Dione Armand; found dead 11/28/01 at Petaluma, Sonoma Co., CA; reported by Lindy Long. 522 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 8/27/01 by Claire O’Neil; found dead 3/23/02 at San Francisco, San Francisco Co., CA; reported by David Peters. 523 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 9/5/01 by Steve Rock; found dead 12/18/01 in San Francisco, San Francisco Co., CA; reported by Officer Jason Kent. SUMMER 2003 GGRO BAND RECOVERIES 2000 TO 2003 524 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 9/18/01 by Ann Ruffer; found dead 3/23/02 at Stockton, San Joaquin Co., CA; reported by Mike Luksic. Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 12/12/01 by Terryann Halloran; trapped again 12/14/01 by Ralph Pericoli; found injured 12/18/01 at San Rafael, Marin Co., CA; reported by Jackie Walton, Wildcare, San Rafael. Later died. 525 526 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 10/9/01 by Ann Ruffer; found dead by injury 1/31/02 at San Francisco, San Francisco Co., CA; reported by the Peninsula Humane Society. 527 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 10/31/01 by Terryann Halloran; found dead due to wire or tower strike 11/24/01 at Middle Two Rock Road, Sonoma Co., CA; reported by Don Waxman. Adult Red-tailed Hawk banded 11/27/01 by Steve Dumdei; found dead 3/5/02 at Petaluma, Sonoma Co., CA; reported by Steve Coffin. 528 529 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 12/11/01 by Lee Morse; found dead 1/25/02 at Petaluma, Sonoma Co., CA; reported by Veana Pearson. 530 Adult Red-tailed Hawk banded 10/17/01 by Toby Rohmer; found dead hit by car 11/22/01 at Daly City, San Mateo Co., CA; reported by Jen Keefer-Stokley, Peninsula Humane Society. Juvenile female Sharpshinned Hawk banded 9/27/00 by Steve Rock; found injured 4/7/02 at Santa Monica, Los Angeles Co., CA; reported by Neil Deruyter. 531 Juvenile female Sharpshinned Hawk banded 9/19/00 by Greg Gothard; caught live 4/15/02 532 at Salinas, Monterey Co., CA; reported by Susan Rianda. Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 11/3/01 by Will Rodriguez; found dead 2/15/02 at Sunol Regional Park, Alameda Co., CA; reported by William Zagotta. 533 Juvenile male Cooper’s Hawk banded 10/8/99 by Dan Gottsegen; found dead from striking object other than wires or tower 4/14/02 at Occidental, Sonoma Co., CA; reported by Michelle Tatersall. 534 535 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 11/18/01 by Claire Gallagher; found dead 1/25/02 at China Camp State Park, San Rafael, Marin Co., CA; reported by Diony Gamoso. Robin Kelley. “I found this hawk during a morning hike. There appeared to be some damage to the rib cage. The wings were spread and the hawk was on its stomach with the head turned to the right. While the hawk lived, it used to sit in all of its splendor on the branches of a partially dead tree on top of a ridge. There are no other Redtailed Hawks visiting the tree or the sky within my view and it’s a shame I no longer see this beautiful bird. It’s a mystery to me what caused the hawk’s death and why it was so easily found on a private road in the Santa Cruz Mountains. Old age? Bad food source? I’m pretty certain it wasn’t West Nile Virus, as it hadn’t been in California at that time.” Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 9/1/95 by Jimi Scheffel; found injured, later died 8/14/02 at Los Altos, Santa Clara Co., CA; reported by Karen Hoyt, the Peninsula Humane Society. 540 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 9/17/95 by Christina Kemmler; found dead 4/30/02 at St. Helena, Napa Co., CA; reported by Marshall Riddle. 536 537 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 8/19/00 by Mitch Skinner; found dead as bones 6/30/02 at Courtland, Sacramento Co., CA; reported by Curtis Jennings. 541 538 Juvenile female Cooper’s Hawk banded 9/21/94 by Lynn Bantley; found dead 6/11/02 at Berkeley, Alameda Co., CA; reported by Jane Dremman. A local breeding bird in a north Berkeley neighborhood since at least 2001, this hawk was found dead in a backyard very close to its nest (CHINS Report 2002). Ms. Dremman had seen the same hawk alive on 6/4/02 in her yard. Cause of death was not apparent. Over the next few weeks, the male continued to supply prey for the five fledglings until all dispersed from the area. 542 Adult Red-tailed Hawk banded 11/23/91 by Kathy Balint; found dead as bones 6/14/02 at Los Gatos, Santa Clara Co., CA; reported by 539 21 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 10/5/01 by Buzz Hull; found dead 10/17/02 at Menlo Park, San Mateo Co., CA; reported by Ellie Engelmore. Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 11/3/95 by Russ DeLong; found dead 10/21/02 at Anacortes, Skagit Co., WA; reported by Richard Grill. Juvenile male Sharp-shinned Hawk banded 8/20/96 by Jennifer Rivas; trapped 9/20/96 at Palomarin, near Bolinas Marin Co., CA; reported by Sanja Hinic, Point Reyes Bird Observatory. Hawk mistnetted and released during PRBO’s long-term landbird monitoring operations. 543 Juvenile male Sharp-shinned Hawk banded 9/30/00 by Nancy Mori; trapped 3/31/01 at Palomarin, near Bolinas Marin Co., CA; reported by Sanja Hinic, 544 PA C I F I C R A P T O R R E P O R T GGRO BAND RECOVERIES 2000 TO 2003 PRBO. Hawk mistnetted and released during PRBO’s long-term landbird monitoring operations. Juvenile male Sharp-shinned Hawk banded 9/25/95 by Laura Cholodenko; trapped 10/24/95 at Palomarin, near Bolinas Marin Co., CA; reported by Sanja Hinic, PRBO. Hawk mistnetted and released during PRBO’s long-term landbird monitoring operations. 545 Juvenile male Sharp-shinned Hawk banded 10/23/97 by Pete Gaughan; trapped 11/12/97 at Palomarin, near Bolinas Marin Co., CA; reported by Sanja Hinic, PRBO. Hawk mistnetted and released during PRBO’s long-term landbird monitoring operations. 546 547 Juvenile female Cooper’s Hawk banded 9/26/01 by David Fix; trapped 11/13/01 at Palomarin, near Bolinas Marin Co., CA; reported by Sanja Hinic, PRBO. Hawk mistnetted and released during PRBO’s long-term landbird monitoring operations. Juvenile American Kestrel banded 9/9/00 by Shari McDougal; found dead 11/23/02 at Pt. Arena, Mendocino Co., CA; reported by Jeanette King. 548 549 Juvenile female Cooper’s Hawk banded 9/16/00 by Craig Nikitas; found dead 12/2/02 at Klamath, Del Norte Co., CA; reported by Melissa Bukosky, California Department of Fish and Game, Eureka. Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 10/25/95 by Neal Johannsen; found dead 12/8/02 at Clinton, Island Co., WA; reported by Lori Jackintell. 550 551 Juvenile female Sharp-shinned Hawk banded 9/17/99 by Randy Breaux; found dead 12/22/02 at El Cajon, San Diego Co., CA; reported by Garrett Sanchez. Adult Red-tailed Hawk banded 12/15/97 by David Jesus; found dead as bones 1/16/03 at Woodland Hills, Los Angeles Co., CA; reported by Thomas Lee. 552 553 Juvenile female Sharpshinned Hawk banded 8/19/00 by Nancy Mori; found dead 1/19/03 at Knights Landing, Yolo Co., CA; reported by David Brown. Joaquin Co., CA; reported by Urban Stroy. Juvenile male Sharp-shinned Hawk banded 10/25/02 by Steve Rock; found dead 11/26/02 at Atascadero, San Luis Obispo Co., CA; reported by Charles Woodard. 562 left out for now – information is contradictory Juvenile male Sharp-shinned Hawk banded 9/14/02 by Kathy Bouvier; found dead 10/9/02 at Torrance, Los Angeles Co., CA; reported by Dirk Voerman. 555 Juvenile female Cooper’s Hawk banded 18/26/01 by Diane Horn; found dead 2/1/03 at Santa Clara, Santa Clara Co., CA; reported by Kellan Koke. Juvenile female Sharpshinned Hawk banded 9/21/02 by Mitch Skinner; found dead 11/7/02 at Agoura Hills, Los Angeles Co., CA; reported by Carl Kruppa. Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 11/27/01 by Jennie Rhine; found injured, later released 11/7/02 at Millbrae, San Mateo Co., CA; reported by the Peninsula Humane Society. Juvenile female Sharpshinned Hawk banded 9/10/02 by John Payne; found dead 11/8/02 at Sonoma, Sonoma Co., CA; reported by George Weiner. 554 556 Juvenile female Sharpshinned Hawk banded 9/23/01 by Jean Perata; found dead 2/8/03 at Bakersfield, Kern Co., CA; reported by Dwayne Levingston. 557 Juvenile female Sharp-shinned Hawk banded 9/15/95 by Buzz Hull; found injured, later released 1/1/03 at Santa Ana, Orange Co., CA; reported by Dr. Scott Weldy. 558 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 12/16/88 by Bill Prochnow; band found 9/12/02 at Klamath Lake, Klamath Co., OR; reported by Doug Jackson. 559 Juvenile female Sharp-shinned Hawk banded 9/24/01 by Craig Nikitas; found dead after striking object other than wires or tower 2/27/03 at La Crescenta, Los Angeles Co., CA; reported by Pat Barton. 560 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 8/26/91 by Diane Kisich; found dead 2/17/03 at Lodi, San 561 22 563 564 565 Juvenile female Sharpshinned Hawk banded 9/30/02 by John Keane; found dead 10/1/02 at Sausalito, Marin Co., CA; reported by Maja Ramsey. 566 Juvenile female Cooper’s Hawk banded 10/2/02 by John Ungar; found dead 10/9/02 at the Marin Headlands, Marin Co., CA; reported by Erika Noel. 567 Juvenile female Cooper’s Hawk banded 9/29/02 by John Keane; found dead 10/12/02 at Cherry Valley, Orange Co., CA; reported by Lester Nolte. 568 Juvenile female Cooper’s Hawk banded 9/8/02 by Dian Langlois; found dead 3/17/03 at Lake Havasu City, Mohave Co., AZ; reported by Lester Nolte. 569 Juvenile female Cooper’s Hawk banded 9/10/02 by Jenn Schulzitski; found dead 12/4/02 at Santa Ynez, Santa Barbara Co., CA; reported by Donald Peterson. 570 SUMMER 2003 GGRO BAND RECOVERIES 2000 TO 2003 Juvenile female Cooper’s Hawk banded 9/18/02 by Audrey Sabol; found dead 12/1/02 at Aptos, Santa Cruz Co., CA; reported by Jonathan Collins. 571 Juvenile female Cooper’s Hawk banded 9/30/02 by Buzz Hull; found dead 10/31/02 at Mission Hills, Santa Barbara Co., CA; reported by Alfredo Romo. 572 Juvenile female Cooper’s Hawk banded 10/16/02 by Ben Lavender; found dead 2/27/03 at Los Angeles, Los Angeles Co., CA; reported by Herbert Miner. 573 Juvenile female Cooper’s Hawk banded 10/7/02 by David Jesus; found dead 11/18/02 at San Jose, Santa Clara Co., CA; reported by Mary Murphy. 574 Juvenile female Cooper’s Hawk banded 9/18/02 by Jenn Schulzitski; found dead 12/8/02 at Chualar Canyon, Monterey Co., CA; reported by Donald Peterson. 575 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 10/19/02 by David Fix; found due to striking object other than wires or tower 10/31/02 at Fremont, Alameda Co., CA; reported by Ohlone Humane Society, Fremont. Died in captivity. 576 577 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 10/30/02 by Mamiko Kawaguchi; found dead 12/02/02 at San Luis Obispo, San Luis Obispo Co., CA; reported by Larry Meak. 578 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 9/17/02 by Ashley Sexton; found dead 11/22/02 at Tracy, San Joaquin Co., CA; reported by Gina Van Koompenburg. 579 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 10/6/02 by Ben Lavender; found dead 1/31/03 at Guadalupe, State of Zacatecas, Mexico; reported by Alfredo Romo. PAT OVERSHINER DISPLAYS THE PATAGIAL MARK—THE QUINTESSENTIAL RED-TAILED HAWK FIELDMARK. [GREG GOTHARD] Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 12/1/02 by Marc Blumberg; found dead 12/05/02 at San Francisco, San Francisco Co., CA; reported by Daniel Gomez. 580 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 12/17/02 by Eric Jepsen; found dead 1/27/03 at San Mateo Co., CA; reported by Peninsula Humane Society, San Mateo. 581 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 10/11/02 by Greg Gothard; found dead 1/29/03 at Pescadero, San Mateo Co., CA; reported by Warham Stejer. 582 583 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 10/29/02 by Lynn Bantley; found dead 12/3/02 at Los Angeles, Los Angeles Co., CA; reported by Bryon Goligoski. 584 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 12/25/02 by Greg Gothard; found dead 1/17/03 at Belvedere, Marin Co., CA; reported by Chuck Kamanski. 585 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 9/22/02 by Joyce Wong; found dead 12/15/02 at Petaluma, 23 Marin Co., CA; reported by Brina Condon. 586 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 12/4/02 by Rob Allen; found dead 12/22/02 at Sylmar, Los Angeles Co., CA; reported by John Martin, US Fish and Wildlife Service. Juvenile female Sharpshinned Hawk banded 9/26/02 by Rob Allen; found dead 3/27/03 at Rancho Palos Verdes, Los Angeles Co., CA; reported by Pat Carroll. 587 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 10/28/02 by Ben Lavender; found dead as bones 3/20/03 at Stockton, San Joaquin Co., CA; reported by David Varnes. 588 Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk banded 1/1/03 by Steve Rock; found dead on highway 3/6/03 at Suisun, Solano Co., CA; reported by SMNHA, Suisun City. 589 Compiled by Buzz Hull and Allen Fish. Some research and correspondence organized by Marion Weeks with help from Ann Ruffer and Greg Brown. PA C I F I C R A P T O R R E P O R T THE KESTRELS OF CUBA THE COOLNESS OF KESTRELS TRANSCENDS LANGUAGE BARRIERS n Siobhan Ruck F EBRUARY 2003, I WAS FORTUNATE enough to join a Pro/Am group to study the birds of Cuba organized by Julie Craves of the Rouge River Bird Observatory (University of Michigan at Dearborn). We were joined by several Cuban naturalists, most notably Orlando Garrido, author of Field Guide to the Birds of Cuba, and William Suarez, of the Cuban Museum of Natural History, a researcher who specializes in paleo-ornithology. Both were very generous in sharing their knowledge of the island’s birds. I N Our group, a mix of professional biologists and volunteers, was conducting bird surveys in several locations in the south and west of Cuba. It was a twopart effort; we were taking counts to get a baseline number and also trying to come up with a standardized methodology that could be used by future birding and tour groups to continue counts in these areas. a mixed pair breeds, the offspring are a mix of red and white, not pink.) Both white- and red-morphs lack the rufous crown patch seen in continental kestrels, although sometimes a very faint color can be seen. The white-morph looks like a very pale version of the kestrels I’m used to in California. They are unmarked or very lightly marked on the breast, belly, and flanks, and where the plumage on continental birds is buffy or tawny, the white-morph birds are a bright white. Backs and tails are similar in color to our birds, though often lightly marked. The mustache mark is very narrow, and there is more white on the face, especially in the cheeks and forehead. Cuba has been separated from the mainland for over 30 million years, which helps explain the large number of endemics—29 endemic birds, with several more soon to be split from continental species. I’d been interested in the Cuban subspecies of American Kestrel (Falco sparverius sparverioides) even before my trip, and it was exciting to see them in the field. The most distinctive feature of Cuban Kestrels is their plumage. They come in two morphs, white and red. The two morphs interbreed freely and are distributed evenly around their range. You see more of the whites, but that’s partly because they shine like little white beacons in the treetops. (When THE RED-TYPE FEMALE CUBAN KESTREL SHOWS A RICHER RUSTIER UNDERPLUMAGE COMPARED TO HER CONTINENTAL SISTERS. [SIOBHAN RUCK] 24 Red-morph birds are a dark, brick red below, though they still don’t show much marking, other than some streaking on the females’ sides. The color on their backs and tails is somewhat darker than on continental kestrels—especially noticeable in the blue areas on males, but their backs are not marked much more than on SUMMER 2003 THE KESTRELS OF CUBA our birds. Their mustache is slightly smaller than the North American birds, and the white areas on their faces are dusky. Both Garrido and Suarez described differences in size (theirs are smaller) and behaviors between the North American birds who winter on the island and the resident Cuban birds. Without going into excruciating detail, chief differences are: (1) how they use the habitat (for both hunting and perching), (2) variability in prey preference and habitat selection, and (3) their reaction to human presence. I asked if the continental and Cuban Kestrels are known to interbreed, and was told that the former are not known to breed on the island; ergo, no interbreeding. (It seems likely that the Cuban Kestrels will be split into their own species at some point.) Kestrels aren’t the only Cuban attraction for raptor lovers. There is an endemic accipiter, Gundlach’s Hawk. The Cuban subspecies of Common Black-Hawk is being split out as Cuban Crab Hawk, and their Hook-billed Kites will likely become a full species as well. (Since returning, I’ve also learned that there is a Cuban subspecies of Broad-winged – wish I’d known that when we saw a few.) And, in case you feel homesick, large numbers of North American migrants pass over the island and many winter there. Going back into the fossil record provides even more raptorial delights – a kestrel-sized falcon that was able to fly, but preferred to run down its prey; a six-foot-tall hawk; a very large eagle (Gigantohierax suarezi); and a condor (Gymnogyps varoni). The nighttime was not much better for edible prey, with a giant owl that stood over a meter and a half (Ornimegalonyx oteroi), another large owl A PALE-TYPE MALE (Bubo osvaldi), and two species of barn-owls (Tyto noeli and T. riveroi). The island never had large mammalian predators, so birds filled their niches in the ancient ecosystem. Geographic isolation has created a rich and diverse fauna on Cuba; political isolation has slowed the human development that threatens so many other parts of the Americas. Change will come to the island sooner or later, which adds a sense of urgency to raptor monitoring studies like ours. NOTE TO READER: Birders’ Exchange has started a specific Cuba Initiative, to help get binoculars and other bird study tools to the island in spite of the blockade. For more info, check out www.americanbirding.org. 25 CUBAN KESTREL TAILCHASES HIS FEMALE COUNTERPART IN THE JUNGLES OF BERNEJA, NEAR THE BAY OF PIGS. [SIOBHAN RUCK] PA C I F I C R A P T O R R E P O R T ROAD TRIP SWAINIES OF THE BUTTE VALLEY n Kathy Fraser Odell GGRO BANDER AND USFS VOLUNTEER STEPHEN WILSON RELEASES A SWAINSON’S HAWK BACK TO THE BUTTE VALLEY GRASSLANDS. [JIM SHEA] O REGON , I drop into California at Dorris, a bordertown that boasts the tallest flagpole in the state, and a restaurant/ cowboy bar named Malfunction Junction. I check into the Golden Eagle Motel, whose owner now recognizes me as someone who comes to watch hawks. For the past three summers, I have volunteered to help Brian Woodbridge of the US Forest Service monitor Swainson’s Hawk nest sites and band the adults and chicks. I read about the opportunity to volunteer with Brian in 1999 in a GGRO newsletter. Then after reading about Klamath Basin raptors in the Pacific Raptor Report, I was hooked. C fields, flying from fenceposts to trees, watching as he worked the land. The eagle would come back each spring and start the cycle again. OMING BACK FROM For each of the last three summers, I’ve spent only a week here in Butte Valley, but when I am here, I am home. I drive down Sheep Mountain Road each July, and I hear the cry of a Swainson’s Hawk. I know which tree these two adults have nested in, where they have raised chicks for the past three years. Today, I stop my car and get out. They come, the two adult Swainson’s, flying toward me, then circling overhead. I close my eyes and listen to their angry warning cries. I lift my binoculars and look to the top of the juniper. There are two chicks this year; I can see their fuzzy white heads above the rim of the nest. Strangers are noticed in this valley. But all I had to say was that I was here to watch the hawks, and I was in. They all have a story to tell about raptors. From the grocery clerks to the inspectors at the California Agriculture station, from the waitstaff at Sharon’s Restaurant to the cashiers at the Texaco, from the ranchers to the firefighters at Goosenest Ranger Station. One rancher told me about a Bald Eagle that followed him around in the I write in my journal: “July 10—first stop off 97 going north—2 chicks in high nest. Parents not around. Got pictures.” I continue on down the road to the foot of Mahogany Mountain. This is where a rancher once asked three of us—all volunteer nest-watchers—if we were 26 SUMMER 2003 ROAD TRIP “environmentalists” before he allowed us to walk his property. All of the ranchers in Butte Valley know about Brian’s work with the Forest Service, and if I say I’m working for him, that’s the magic word to get me onto their property. I met only one rancher in three years who wouldn’t allow us on his land, and that was because he was being protective of “his hawks.” They fed heavily on grasshoppers and crickets, as well as on small animals. Driving down any road, I see hawks sitting on telephone poles, treetops, and fenceposts. I expect to see as many Swainson’s as Redtails. The perched Redtails show more neck than the Swainies. I begin to be able to identify them without binoculars. “Coffee smells so sweet here in morning in Butte Valley.” We start hiking through the scrub and dry grass at 5:30 AM. We start before dawn cause it gets very hot, and this is the best time to set up mistnets for trapping the Swainson’s. Many mornings at dawn, I stop on the side of one of the roads that crisscross the valley. I get out my binoculars and point them in any direction, and find raptors. There are Golden Eagles here. There are Bald Eagles, Prairie Falcons, Ferruginous Hawks, American Kestrels, Redtailed Hawks, and even Northern Harriers. But I come for the Swainson’s. “Mount Hebron—drove to RR tracks, down gravel road—saw antelope in field. Adult BE sharing kill with four TVs.” Trains come through Butte Valley day and night. Wherever I am in this valley, I hear the wail of the train whistle. The open, endless space here gives a feeling of freedom and joy. But when I want to see hawks, I follow the mowers. Irrigation rings cover most of the fields, and you might see five species of raptors lined up along these rings. Dawn is the best time to see them. Ground squirrels stick their heads out of their holes every four or five feet. It is comical to look at them. “Squirrels watch me,” I wrote in my journal. look for new nests, check on previously successful nests, and count the chicks. We keep journal notes on the locations, on the ages of chicks, and on the best place to set up nets for the next morning. (The last two summers, I worked with Chris Briggs, who was a GGRO intern in 2000.) I love tramping through the sage and scrub. I find bleached bones, scat, lava, a coyote skeleton, animal tracks, and feathers. “Under tree found old pellets, feathers, down on limbs, lots of scat. No signs of current use.” O N THE FIRST DAY IN A NEW AREA, we Brian taught us how to look for Swainson’s Hawk nests. They like the tops of trees, mostly junipers near open fields. Nest-searching reminded me of the childhood game “Hotter, hotter, colder, colder,” except that the hidden prize this time was a Swainson’s nest with chicks. That morning, after the mowers left, there was a juvenile Bald Eagle, looking like someone had splattered white paint onto his dark feathers. He looked bewildered by all the activity. Lined up next to him were adult and juvenile Goldens, Redtails, Ravens, Swainson’s, adult Balds, and TVs. All were lined up together watching the ground squirrels. I realized the squirrels were watching me as I leaned against my car. Everyone’s watching everyone here. “Drove down Sheep Mountain Road—so quiet— thermals not up yet.” In a Pacific Raptor Report article on raptor-touring the Klamath Basin, Allen Fish wrote, “When the ground squirrels are visibly running, this region can be hilariously thick with raptors.” What was surprising to me was seeing so many adult Bald Eagles sharing kills with TVs. I also saw Swainson’s Hawks hunting like Harriers, but they generally spent a lot of time perching on the ground like Ferruginous Hawks. We hike for miles through sage and junipers, along lavastrewn hillsides, into deep valleys, watching the sky. We are getting close (hotter); we hear a far-off cry from a Swainson’s. The closer we get to the nest, the closer the adults fly, the louder and more urgent their cries. We spread out, covering more distance and checking more trees. I hear a distant yell. It’s Chris, and he has found the nest. We all come running. The pair is now circling the tree, and they are close and very loud. Two Swainson’s are in my binocular view at the same time, one a dark morph. I almost trip and fall backwards. Chris climbs the tree carefully. It’s a thick-limbed juniper, 35 feet high, and he can’t see the top. When he finally reaches the nest, we circle the tree, and watch from the 27 PA C I F I C R A P T O R R E P O R T ROAD TRIP ground. He reaches blindly into the nest, trying to hang on to the tree with his other arm. We follow him with our binoculars and direct his hand. He picks one chick at a time out of the nest and bands it while sitting on a branch just below the nest. The adults are angry, and take turns diving at Chris with their talons outstretched. We yell, “Here they come!” and he ducks again and again. I hear Brian yell “Duck!” The wingbeats are close now, the screams in my ears. I duck below the nest. Whoosh!—the wings pass nearer; they are both diving at my head. I hold my plastic camera up and point it in the direction of the chick. I pray it is a good picture. I climb down as fast as I can and we run to the truck. Once again, one adult follows us, as the other circles the nest. Brian said it is the male who chases us; the female stays near the chick. Chris returns the chicks to the nest and quickly climbs down the tree. We run as fast as we can away from the tree, not wanting to disturb them anymore. One of the Swainson’s follows us to the car; one of them stays with the nest. They do that almost every time. In the Field Guide to Hawks of North America, Clark and Wheeler state “Swainson’s are sometimes aggressive in nest defense, especially if they have chicks. SH have struck human intruders.” “Saw possible Swainson’s—third pole to left, west on Shady Dell Rd.” I wave goodbye to Chris as he drives off for the day. It is early evening and I must leave for home the next morning. I sit in my plastic lawn chair beside the dirt road, watching the skies for a SwainA TYPICALLY WARY JUVENILE “Up at 5:30 this morning—shoes so full of son’s. Maybe this time I can find a new SWAINSON’S HAWK GIVES JIM THE thistles and weeds, can’t wear them, socks, OLD UP-AND- DOWN. [JIM SHEA] nest site. I settle in, leaning back with too.” One morning Brian asked if I wanted to my binoculars in my lap. It is still very warm, and the sun climb the tree and see the chicks while they were still in casts shadows on the hills above me. I am covered in road the nest. I didn’t hesitate, even though he warned me dirt and dust. about the talons of the adult Swainson’s, protecting the nest. He had seen a bander with a shredded scalp and A juvenile Golden flies above me, heading east. From blood running down his face. Brian would yell when the south I hear a Swainson’s cry before I see the bird. they were close. He dives at the Golden, chases it away to the north. The Swainson’s then heads south and I lose sight of it. Soon, I reach the top of the tree, find a nest made of sticks, a juvenile Bald appears and also flies east. Now there grasses, and dried wheat stalks. I hear the wings of the are three TVs circling near the eagle. I hear a Swainson’s adult male and female circling nearer, their cries closer angry cry but I again can’t see him. Soon I do; he is and closer. Sticking my head above the nest, I am within diving on the Bald and chases it away. He doesn’t seem inches of the five-to-six-week old chick. He is full-sized, to mind the vultures and circles around them for a but his head is covered with white down. His beak is while. He disappears to the south again. There is a nest wide open but he is soundless. I look into his dark eyes somewhere near here. I lean back and close my eyes; and am awed by this creature. I have nowhere to go. “Hi!” I said. What a profound thing to say. If this chick Kathy Fraser Odell is a passionate GGRO Hawkwatcher survives, he will fledge soon and then leave Butte Valley; and unstoppable defender of habitat for hook-beaked birdlife. She also appears as “Aunt Kathy” in Joelle Fraser’s 2002 he will leave California. The ranges of Swainson’s Hawks bestseller, The Territor y of Men. extend from the interior of Alaska to the pampas of Argentina. 28 SUMMER 2003 IN MEMORIAM WA R R E N P LU M B [ 1 9 2 6 – 2 0 0 3 ] T When his condition no longer allowed him to actively track hawks, Warren then volunteered to drive or ferry team members out into the field. He was always willing to help. During the 2001 season, Warren even helped by being a “drop-off ’ point for equipment; of course, when we picked up the receivers, he had made sure that all were properly charged. H O S E O F U S W H O H AV E B E E N in the Golden Gate Raptor Observatory (GGRO) Telemetry Program for a long time will always remember Warren as a gentle, quiet, detail-man who loved tracking hawks on telemetry. Warren joined the GGRO in the early 90s and began on David Jesus’s Hawkwatch Team; however, he was soon bitten by the Telemetry bug. He remained on Hawkwatch until complications of earlier polio meant that he could no longer stand against the wind on Hawk Hill. He then moved indoors to the GGRO offices and became the GGRO library guru who organized, categorized and “modernized” our Raptor Library. Warren was a quiet, humble gentleman. He enjoyed waiting with the teams at the GGRO offices and watching the transmitters being applied to the hawks. Once, when we were shorthanded, we asked Warren if he thought he could mix the epoxy. Warren humbly replied, “I think so. I was a polymer chemist.” Telemetry allowed Warren to continue active participation in the GGRO as we tracked juvenile Redtails throughout California. Warren was atop Oat Mountain when one juvenile Redtail took one look at the Los Angeles basin, made a U-turn around Oat Mountain, and eventually flew back north over the Grapevine. Later, when we had a recurrent problem with transmitters slipping or moving on the feather shaft after releasing the hawk, Warren became our resident expert. He bought several types of epoxy, tested them, and then, based on his suggestions, we rewrote the protocols for applying epoxy to the transmitter. End of problem. But that wasn’t enough for Warren. He then made faux transmitters so that volunteers could practice applying transmitter to feathers. Warren was a problem-solver, and once—when equipment problems meant a Yagi antenna was unavailable—he developed a method to track using only the roof-mounted Omni. To aid a highpoint team, he fabricated a mounting piece that allowed a Yagi to be mounted on a tripod so that the signal could be consistently monitored. Warren frequently noted how much he enjoyed Telemetry work, and wished he could be out tracking. Prior to GPS devices, Warren would take all of the teams’ datasheets, determine the exact location of each team, and then measure that location to the millimeter . He missed his time in the field, and now we will miss our detail man, our polymer chemist, our communications man, our inventor, our resident expert, our teammate, and our friend. —Lynn Jesus 29 PA C I F I C R A P T O R R E P O R T P E R E G R I N AT I O N S DIURNAL RAPTORS OF SAN FRANCISCO n Simone Whitecloud AN ADULT PEREGRINE DEFENDS ITS HOME TURF—THE SAN FRANCISCO- G OAKLAND BAY BRIDGE—ABOVE SAN FRANCISCO’S EMBARCADERO. OT HALF A DAY FREE , OR EVEN HALF A MINUTE , [DAVID JESUS] to get a raptor fix? No need to travel far; San Francisco is chockful of busy birds any time of year, and public transit makes sites available to the environmentally minded or car-less. Fall and spring provide migrants, and winter yields residents, many of which remain to nest in the spring. While it is possible to see all 19 species of West Coast raptors, some are rare. But isn’t that all the more reason to cast the occasional glance to the promising skies? Hawk Hill in the Marin Headlands, so too is the city subject to the ever-changing winds. The best site for migration-watching changes daily due to these conditions, so a few local experts recommend a preliminary trip to Twin Peaks (Muni Line 37). Here, it’s possible to see where the greatest action may be, which could be right overhead. From this second highest point in the city, fall migration comes to life with sightings ranging from Red-tailed Hawk and American Kestrel to the occasional Whitetailed Kite and Northern Harrier. Rarer spottings include Bald Eagles, Rough-legged Hawks, one Golden Eagle, and a kettle of seven Broad-winged Hawks in September 2002. As on Hawk Hill, the best time for viewing these hurried migrants is from 10 AM to 2 PM, although Merlins tend to zip through at sunrise. Why not brush up on your skills during a pre-work pit stop? Diligent watch of the city’s sky can help fill in some of the mysteries of raptor life in an urban area, not to mention details of suspected but as-yet-unrecorded nesters. The joys of refining hawkwatching skills on a lunch break or a trip to the grocery store can also add to our knowledge of the behavior of these wild creatures as our world meshes with theirs. So keep your binoculars handy and a watchful eye on the heavens. If wind conditions are too harsh on Twins Peaks, Grand View Park at Moraga and 15th (Muni Line 66) is a great spot in an easterly wind. This site boasts the personal- MIGRATION WATCH-SITES Just as hawk watching is affected greatly by weather on DO YOU H AV E A FAV O R I T E RAPTOR HOTSPOT 30 IN CALIFORNIA? SEND IT IN! SUMMER 2003 P E R E G R I N AT I O N S 1 SAN FR AN Golden Gate Bridge CISC O BAY Lafayette Park Lindley Meadow Br M San Francisco AR MISSION ST. Lone Mountain JFK Drive Buena Golden Gate Park Vista Park Strawberry Arboretum Buffalo Hill Paddock Grand View Twin Park Peaks CESAR CHAVEZ Chain of Lakes y Presidio Public Service Inspiration Point Hospital KE T Ba Baker Beach Lobos Creek id ge Battery Boutelle VAN NESS Common sense tells one that there must be a spot just across the bay from Hawk Hill that acts as a point of entry for the aquaphobic raptors. In the Presidio, on the west side of the Golden Gate Bridge immediately west of the Toll Plaza and Fort Point (Muni Lines 28 and 76), is just such a place, which actually allows a view of Hawk Hill: Battery Boutelle. Unfortunately, this site presents a few problems. While you may see a distant speck leave Hawk Hill, it may veer east mid-Gate, and never give you a good look. (Why not try the east side of the bridge? Lighting is less favorable.) Hawk Hill h Ocean Beac Mt. Davidson (Muni Line 36) is, at 927 feet, actually the highest peak in the city by 5 feet. It is also the only point in the city to have provided a peek at a Northern Goshawk in the fall of 2002. (Which one-ups Hawk Hill, where there were zero sightings of this bird in 2002.) Also seen on the mount: a Ferruginous Hawk, and the usual flow of Redtails and Kestrels. Marin Headlands PARK PRESIDIO BLVD. best SF hawkwatch of local expert Brian Fitch, who raked in 40 birds in a few hours, including a Golden Eagle. Okay, it’s no Hawk Hill, but how many other cities can offer such delicacies? . ST 280 101 Mount Davidson India Basin Balboa Park Lake Merced John McLaren Park Fort Funston GE 0 NE VA AVE . 1 Mile 35 Bay View Park lines 29, 52, and 54), Lone Mountain on the campus of the University of San Francisco (Muni Lines 31 and 43), and downtown. Biologist Josiah Clark speculates that downtown SF attracts the younger migrants, who see the towering buildings as cliffs, and they move to catch thermals there. That means plenty of goofing-off opportunities for students and professionals alike! The birds also tend to come into SF very high, again making ID difficult. This can be remedied by watching in conditions that push birds down, such as a low fog ceiling. The final difficulty with Battery Boutelle is in relation to national security—setting up a scope at the base of any bridge is less than advisable these days. If you’re okay with just binos, bird away! This is one of the few places in the city a Prairie Falcon has been seen. One final site of interest—Bay View Park (Muni Lines 15 and 29) hilltop provides an excellent view to the south, and so is a choice spot for watching the spring migration. This is the only spot in the city to host a Swainson’s Hawk sighting. Any point offering a good vantage of the city can provide nice looks at the watered-down flow of migrants. “No matter where I station myself, there always seems to be distant raptors to the east and west of me; they’re just not as concentrated once they cross the Gate,” says Fitch. Three other suggested locations are McLaren Park (Muni WINTER RESIDENT RAPTORS Finding birds of prey in the city is pretty easy—go to the green places or areas with a high density of raptor food— 31 PA C I F I C R A P T O R R E P O R T P E R E G R I N AT I O N S pigeons, starlings, rats, and gophers, not to mention our songbird-gathering friends, birdfeeders. Or take a look up: the birds use the city as a hunting ground in and of itself, a mosaic of open areas and perches, especially Redtails, Peregrine Falcons, and accipiters, which follow flocks of finches from feeder to feeder. the migration season, and lessons from Hawk Hill were beginning to fade . . . sadly, it remained an “unid’d accipiter.”) Should your way out of the park include a ride down Park Presidio Boulevard (Muni Line 28), keep your eyes on the many eucalyptus trees that line the road—I’ve seen a juvenile Cooper’s Hawk in hot pursuit of songbirds, an unidentified falcon (hey, I was driving!), and a Redshoulder hunting from a lightpost during my commute into the city. Remember to check anything that might be used as a hunting perch— a power tower, a telephone pole, a treetop, a church steeple, or rooftop. While the whole city offers the oppor- A DARKER-TYPE MERLIN (SUBSPECIES SUCKLEYI) TAKES tunity to see birds of prey in action ONE LAST LOOK AROUND BEFORE SETTLING INTO LUNCH. [DAVID JESUS] (what could be more exciting to see than a Peregrine stoop on a pigeon over If you’re shuttling around by bus, both the 28 and 29 Geary Avenue on your dreary commute?), there are cerlines take you directly from the Presidio to Golden Gate tain hotspots, which also happen to be the more natural Park—which is also accessible by the 5, 16 AX BX, 18, 21, areas of the city. 33, 44, 66, and 71, not to mention the many lines that The Presidio (Muni Lines 28 and 29) is home to Merlins, pass within a couple blocks of the park, including the Red-tailed, Red-shouldered, Cooper’s, and SharpN Judah. As these are living and moving creatures you shinned Hawks. American Kestrels are found there seek, keep your eyes open as you travel through the park, as well, though their numbers in the city have declined for they could be anywhere. over the last 10 years. One favorite spot in the eastern side of Golden Gate Park At Baker Beach (Muni Line 29), Peregrine Falcons and is the Arboretum, in which reside Cooper’s and SharpRedtails hunt in the strong winds coming off the ocean shins, and where Redtails and Redshoulders hunt overand up the cliffs; Redshoulders lurk in the nearby head. A second is Strawberry Hill in Stowe Lake, where cypresses and pines. While in the park, visit two great Redshoulders maneuver in the many Monterey cypresses lookouts: (1) Inspiration Point, which is off Arguello and pines, and above which, Redtails soar. The area Blvd. (a seven-block urban hike from Muni Lines 43 or around JFK Drive and 8th Street, also in the eastern half 28), and (2) the parking area of the Public Health Service of the park, is a hangout for our two most common Hospital (Muni Line 28) near 15th Avenue. buteos as well. The first is good for spotting Sharpies hunting neighborhood feeders. The second overlooks Lobos Creek, a restoration site that is home to the few remaining California quail of the Presidio, which hungry hawks regard as fair game. From here it is possible to see raptors working the Avenues. (It was a pleasure to spot four Redtails and a diving accipiter in our 10-minute break there in mid-February. It was my first accipiter since the end of In the western half of Golden Gate Park, the open gopher-filled fields of the Buffalo Paddock make an excellent hunting ground for Redtails, as does Lindley Meadow. Further west is the Chain of Lakes, where accipiters and Redshoulders prey upon the many well-fed starlings, blackbirds, and small rodents. Once you’re this far, why not continue west to Ocean Beach (Muni Lines 5, 18, 23, 31, 38, 48, 71, N, L), where Redtails and Pere32 SUMMER 2003 P E R E G R I N AT I O N S grines are seen with regularity, and an occasional coastal Osprey puts in an appearance. On the subject of Peregrines, it should be mentioned that there are two known nesting pairs in the vicinity of the city, one of which is on the Bay Bridge, the other on the Golden Gate. Since falcons begin protecting nesting territories in the fall, these birds can be seen hunting over the city almost year-round. They tend to hunt over the more urban areas, where pigeons are common and competition is scarce. Besides looking for them on or near the bridges, Sutro Tower (Muni Line 36), Fort Funston (Muni Line 18), and pigeon-heavy downtown are good possibilities, as is Heron’s Head, a jut of land north of Hunter’s Point and India Basin (sorry, not easily accessed by bus). This last site is also one of the few places in the city to see Osprey and Northern Harriers. A JUV REDTAIL CHECKS THE CALIFORNIA ROLLING STOPS AT A BUSY INTERSECTION. [MIKE WEBER] Lake Merced (Muni lines 17, 18, and 88) is one other place to see Harriers and Osprey. A pair of Osprey has been seen here for several years performing courtship rituals over the lake, but no nest has been found. Cooper’s, Sharp-shinned, and Red-shouldered Hawks also make this their home. due to competition from European starlings for nest holes, and a lack of woodpeckers for making new ones. The search for a raptor nest can be a rewarding adventure, made possible by the frequent trips required of the birds in nest-building and nestling-feeding seasons. Or ask local birders, who will probably have knowledge of locations and/or volunteer-based nest monitoring programs, such as the one that exists in the Presidio. Should you be gifted with finding a nest, please respect the strain of parenthood, and keep a distance. Although these parks are regarded as hotspots, don’t limit your endeavors to only their vast greenery. Smaller parks such as Buena Vista (Muni Lines 6, 7, 66, 37, and 71) and Lafayette Park (Muni Lines 1 and 12) harbor enough food to keep at least one bird interested, in this case a Redshoulder and a Redtail, respectively. Merlins are actually widespread in wintertime SF, but difficult to pin down to a specific location. The city eagerly awaits your hungry eyes; how can you pass up the opportunity to mix a little pleasure with your daily business? Local birders who have made this a way of life, and whose knowledge and dedication made this article possible, include Steve Bauer, Josiah Clark, Allen Fish, Brian Fitch, Alan Hopkins, Ben Lavender, Kim Meyer, Dan Murphy, and Allen Ridley. Many thanks for their willingness to share hard-earned information. Happy raptoring! NESTS IN THE CITY Sorry, I won’t make this easy for you, for the simple reason that nesting raptors are sensitive to human attention. At Golden Gate Park, a pair of Redtails—which usually rebuild a nest from previous years—has had to expend energy moving their nest farther and farther from human view after a scope-filled springtime a few years back. I’ll only go as far as saying that Redtails, Redshoulders, and Cooper’s Hawks are common nesters in the city’s large parks, while American Kestrels are declining in number A 2002 GGRO Intern, Simone Whitecloud conducted bird sur veys in the Eastern Sierra for Point Reyes Bird Obser vator y, and pioneered “Raptor Camp” for the Crissy Field Center, all in 2003.A skilled environmental educator on Hawk Hill, she can be reached at flowerpiercer@hotmail.com. 33 PA C I F I C R A P T O R R E P O R T 2002 DONORS Since 1985, the GGRO has asked donors and even volunteers to annually dig into their pockets for the hawks. Over the years, this show of support has allowed us to start several innovative projects, among them the Radiotelemetry Program, the RoboLure Program, the Intern Program, and the Docent Program. I’m grateful to the partners below to carrying us through 2002, and helping us move toward the NEXT BIG THING on the GGRO front: a thorough analysis of two decades of banding, counting, and radiotracking data. —Allen Fish Jeff Acuff • Christine Adams • Rob Allen • Patricia Allison • Christina Althoff • Henry Altorfer • Anne Ardillo • Kendra Armer • Laura Armor •The Atkinson Family • Audubon Canyon Ranch • Paul Babwin & Karen Bell • Diane Bahr • Hugh Bain • Baker & McKenzie • Robert Ball • Bank of America Matching Gifts Program • Juliana Barr • Steve Bauer • Anne Baxter • Tim Behr • Sylvia & Bruce Benzler & Friends • Christopher Berner • Anne Bernstein • F J Bethke • Ardith Betts • Marc Blumberg • Bill & Jennifer Bollinger • Dix & Marilyn Boring • Heather Borman • Gleneda Borton • Carroll Botvinick • Kathy Bouvier • Stewart Brand & Ryan Phelan • Kathryn Brazee • Randy Breaux • Max Brier & Mary Anne Flett • Nancy Brink • Dixie Brown • Edwin & Claire Brown • Geraldine Brown • Greg Brown • Phyllis Browning • Jim Brulet • Shannon Burke • Joe Burns & Jessica Cezniak • CA Montessori Project • Bill Callaway • Julia Camp • Richard & Sandra Camp • John Campau • Hugh & Pearl Campion • Cheryl Carnes • Richard Casserley • John Caulfield • Joan Chaplick • Oliver Chesley • Paul Chestnut • Elise Ching • Donna Ciccolini • Ronald Cliff • Terry Coddington • Joanna Cohen • Howard & Jeanne Cohn • Christine Colasurdo • George Coles • Compton Foundation, Inc. • Gerald Connell • Lewis Cooper • John Corson • Kanit Cottrell • John Crane • Charles Cutting • Ludek Dadok • Anne Darragh & David Ford • Gary Davis • Thomas Dawson • Pamela Dayton • Alberic & Grace de Laet • Tom Delebo • Karen DeMello • Licia DeMeo • DFS Group Limited • Charles & Leslie Dicke • J D Durst • Wade Eakle • Peter Ehrlich • Bruce Elder • Bob Elliott • Michael & Stacy Erb • Marian Erdelyi • Val Fairman • Roxanne Farwell & David Barry • Tom Felts • Ron Felzer • Richard Ferris • Amy Fillin • Allen Fish & Allison Pennell • George & Patsy Fish • Caroline Fisher • David Fix • Anne Flannery • Leslie Flint • George Foster • Ellen Frank • Steven Frank & Heidi Petersen • Rebecca Freed • Lillian Fujii & Steven Hayashi • Theresa Gabel & Timothy Zumwalt • Jack Gescheidt • Kevin Gilmartin & Barbara Bessey • Joseph Glass • GMAC-RFC Associates • Sandy Goldberg • Golden Gate Audubon • Morey Goldstein • Cindy Goral & Jerry Scharf • Greg Gothard • Alan Gould • Gil Greene • Dorothy Gregor • Earl Gress • Keith Gress • John Griffin • Elias Gross • Mary Haack • Fred Hagar • Katherine Hager • Aaron & Joshua Haiman & Ann Kositsky • Jennifer Hamilton • Michael Harkins • Judy Harris • Sybil Hatch • Laurie Helm • Werner Hertz • Ann Heurlin • Diane Hichwa • Edna Hickok • Barbara Hilbourn • Jan Hintermeister & Carol Oda • Roberta Hollier • Calvin Hom • Thomas Hopkins • Diane Horn • Richard & Theresa Horrigan • Sandra Horwich • Ellen Hughes • Buzz Hull • Mark Inman • James & Susan Jackson • William James • E W Jameson • M Alan Jenkins • Eric Jepsen • David & Lynn Jesus • Donald Johnson • Gregory Johnson • Scott Johnston • Oliver Joost • Barbara Jording • Mamiko Kawaguchi • Mary Kenney • John Knox • Tom Konno • Donald Koors & Nancy Williams • Cheryl Kraywinkel • Julia Kringel • Kenneth Landon • Diane Lang • Dian Langlois • Robert & Ruth Langridge • Langwater Foundation • Rebecca Lawton • Owen & Eva-Lynne Leibman • Lamar Leland • Winifred Lennihan • Allison Levin • Dan Lewis • Sue Loar • Ina Lockwood • Jeff Longcrier • Ariel Lowrey • Gerald Luckham • Ekhard Mahl • Eugene Majerowicz • Robert Mallette • Ron Mallory • Ralph March • Daniel Mardesich • Marin Community Foundation • Val Martino • Charles & Sandy Massen • L W Thomas & Alice May • Kirk & Jane McAllister • Karin McClune • Susan McGreevy • Yvonne McHugh • Julia McHugh & Scott Orlosky • Ewen McKechnie • Kevin McKreghan • Anne McTavish • Frazer Meacham & Edith Summers • David Mendelson • Peter Meybaum • Amy Meyer • Kim Meyer • Phil Meyer • Sally Miller • Sally & Jim Mills • Dee Mitchell • Henry Mitchell • Julia Molander • Maura & John Moody • Nancy Mori • Alida Morzeny • Thomas Moutoux • Jean Myers • Mikiye Nakanishi • Jill North • Bob Numerof & Robert Shepard • Mansurali Nurmuhammad • Ed & Marcia Nute • John Odell • Kathy Odell • Steve O’Donnell • Ohlone Audubon Society • Griffin Okie • Claire & Tom O’Neil • Pat Overshiner • Wendy Parfrey • Diane Parish & Paul Gelburd • Jedd Parker • Kim Parker • Katherine Pattison • Susan Pemberton • Peninsula Community Foundation • Annette & Robin Pennell • Jean Perata & Dennis Davison • Ralph Pericoli • Owen Perron • John Perry • Deborah Petersen • Marjorie & Theodore Plant • Tania Pollak • Carol Poole • Bill Prochnow • C John Ralph • John & Cynthia Rathkey • Don Reinberg • John Relph • Jennie Rhine • H Allan Ridley • Michelle Rios • Elizabeth Rippe • Marci Riseman • Bob Ritchie • Barbara & Duane Robinson • Steven & Anne Rock • Gordon & Helen Rockett • Fred Rohl • Richard Romero • Diane Rooney • Alex Rose • Lilia Rosenheimer • Jim Ross • Elizabeth Rouan • Gayle Rubin • Siobhan & Bill Ruck • Steve Rudolph • Ann Ruffer • Maggie Rufo • Philip Ruhle • Leonard & Elizabeth Rush • Walter Sakai • Serena Salomon • Ivan Samuels • Barbara Samuelson • Nancy Sasser • Juta Savage • Andrea & David Schearn • Rolf & Charlotte Scherman • Norma Pauline Schmid • Marilyn Schmitz • Donald Schmoldt • Marianne Seiki • Rich Seymour • Gail Shea • James Shea • Jay Sheets • John Shellenberger • Dan Sherman • Carrie Sherriff • Will Shor • John & Heidi Shott • Martin Sidor • Marjorie Smith • Robin Smith • Brian Smucker • Sharon Solomon • Philip Steiner • Stellar Solutions • Anne Stephens • Joan Stewart • Angela Strehli • Bill & Tracy Strong • Hal Sugishita • Jan Sutcher • Scot Sutherland • Tracy Swartz • Chris Taylor • Craig Tewell • Srijesh Thapa • The Orion Society • Bruce & Phyllis Thompson • John Ungar • Janet Valette • Linda Vallee • Richard Vanderlugt • Janet Vernon • Nick & Denise Villa • Jeff Wall • Mary Watt • Michael Weber • Marion Weeks • S Paul Welles • Richard & Virginia Welsh • Walter Wenger • Nick Whelan • Peter White • Thomas White • Franklin Whitman • David Wilbur • Martha Wilson & Ed Lewis • Ken Wilson & Rebecca Olsen • Richard Winslow • Carolyn & A Frederick Wood • Jeanette Wyckoff • Jim Yampolsky • Nick Yatsko • ReuvenYosef • Bob Zeiss 34 SUMMER 2003 2002 VOLUNTEERS Biologists Dave DeSante and Dan Rosenberg closed their 1998 essay “What do we need to monitor in order to manage landbirds?” with the paragraph below. I can think of no better way to honor the work of the hundreds of volunteers of the GGRO. This is us: “The recruitment, training, and maintenance of a network of volunteers is thus also crucial to the success of any large-scale integrated bird population-monitoring scheme. Ultimately, an interest in and appreciation of birds at the grassroots level must be cultivated if we are to succeed in identifying and describing avian population changes and in developing successful conservation strategies for reversing population declines.” —from Avian Conservation, edited by John Marzluff and Rex Sallabanks, Island Press. Jeff Acuff • Lindsay Albert • Rob Allen • Christina Althoff • Henry Altorfer • Anne Ardillo • Kendra Armer • Lillian Armstrong • Keith Arsenault • Stefanie Arthur • Nikki Ausschnitt • Diane Bahr • Carol Baird • Lynn Bantley • David Barry • Steve Bauer • Tim Behr • Cathy Bell • Christopher Berner • Ardith Betts • Greg Beuthin • Janet Blasi Hayssen • Marc Blumberg • Jeff Boissier • Jennifer Bollinger • Bill Bollinger • Carroll Botvinick • Kathy Bouvier • John Boyd • Kathy Branstetter • Randy Breaux • Max Brier • Nancy Brink • Greg Brown • Jessie Brownlee • Jim Brulet • Shannon Burke • Joe Burns • Raymond Cachia • Bill Callaway • John Campau • Phil Capitolo • Linda Chambers • Joan Chaplick • Donna Ciccolini • Jim Clausen • Terry Coddington • Gerald Connell • Lewis Cooper • Susan Corbaley • William Corning • John Corson • Valerie Cramer • John Crane • Susannah Dameron • Della Dash • Dennis Davison • Pamela Dayton • Tom Delebo • Ron DeLeon • Russ DeLong • Frank DeMarco • Annie Dizon • Steve Dumdei • J D Durst • Wade Eakle • Roxanne Farwell • Nina Felton • Tom Felts • Mark Fenn • Richard Ferris • Amy Fesnock • Alice Fialkin • Lisa Fields • Robbie Fischer • Allen Fish • Grace Fitzgerald • David Fix • Pat Flemming • Mary Anne Flett • Leslie Flint • Joseph Foo • Ross Forman • Alexandra Forman • Joseph Frank • Michael Franklin • Rebecca Freed • Heather Furmidge • Claire Gallagher • Lorrie Gallagher • Betzi Gardner • Pete Gaughan • Carol Gerstein • Jack Gescheidt • Andy Gibb • Angelo Gilbert • Joseph Glass • Sandy Golderg • Julie Goldzman • Gil Greene • Dorothy Gregor • Keith Gress • John Griffin • Keith Grimson • Charles Groff • Aaron Haiman • Joshua Haiman • Jim Hallisey • Jennifer Hamilton • Monica Hanza • Michael Harkins • Alan Harper • Judy Harris • Ann Heurlin • Barbara Hilbourn • Leslie Holeman • Roberta Hollier • Calvin Hom • Diane Horn • Dick Horn • Gernot Huber • Buzz Hull • Josh Hull • Carolgene Hunter • Jennifer Hyypio • Cheryl Ishida • William James • Eric Jepsen • David Golden Gate Raptor Observatory Jesus • Neal Johannsen • Donald Johnson • Scott Johnston • Debbie Kahn • Building 1064, Ft. Cronkhite, Sausalito, CA 94965 Mamiko Kawaguchi • John Keane • Jack Kearns • Mary Kenney • Laurie King • (415) 331-0730 • fax (415) 331-7521 Charlotte Kisling • Tom Konno • Margaret Kosek • Ann Kositsky • Cheryl ggro@parksconser vancy.org • www.ggro.org. Kraywinkel • Beverly Lamberson • Joan Lamphier • James Langan • Dian Langlois PRR Editor: Allen Fish • Ben Lavender • Brian Lebreck • Leah Lempert • Allison Levin • Ed Lewis • Fred PRR Designer: Bill Prochnow Lindeman • Ina Lockwood • Bob Long • Gerald Luckham • Virgina Ludvik • PRR Copy Editors: Fran McDermott, Betzi Sylvan, Allison Busch Elizabeth Madriz • Val Martino • Charles Massen • Mark McCaustland • Bridget McCollum • Christie McCullen • Fran McDermott • Ewen McKechnie • Yvonne McHugh • Stephanie McNair • Frazer Meacham • Mona Mena • Horacio Mena GGRO Research Director: Buzz Hull GGRO Executive Director: Allen Fish GGRO Office Manager: Betzi Sylvan • David Mendelson • Jay Mendoza • Thomas Menendez • Peter Meybaum • Kim 2002 Research Interns: Simone Whitecloud, Ashley Sexton, Ben Lavender, Karalyn Rodenkirchen Meyer • Lee Miles • Terrie Miller • Steve Miller • John Moody • Maura Moody • GGNRA Advisor: Daphne Hatch Nancy Mori • Lisa Morse • Tom Moutoux • Mikiye Nakanishi • Thi Nguyen • Chris Parks Conser vancy Director of Community Programs: Doug Overman Nikitas • Craig Nikitas • Jill North • Bob Numerof • Steve O’Donnell • Brian Founder & USGS Advisor: Judd Howell O’Laughlin • Claire O’Neil • Steve O’Neill • Kathy Odell • Rebecca Olsen • Pat Theresa Rettinghouse • Jennie Rhine • Matt Ricketts • Michelle Rios • Steven Rock The Pacific Raptor Report (PRR) is the annual newsletter of the Golden Gate Raptor Obser vator y, but we also welcome any raptorial articles based in the Pacific States. The Pacific Raptor Report is published once each summer by the GGRO, a program of the Golden Gate National Parks Conser vancy in cooperation with the National Park Ser vice. The GGRO Season Summar y is published in the winter. Subscriptions to both are $25 per year, with checks made out to “GGRO.” • Kari Rodenkirchen • William Rodriguez • Toby Rohmer • Richard Romero • Laury About the Parks Conservancy Overshiner • Elizabeth Palmer • Phyllis Pansegrau • John Payne • Susan Pemberton • Jean Perata • Ralph Pericoli • Danielle Perrine • Madalyn Perrine • John Perry • Ryan Phelan • Jim Polkinghorn • Tania Pollak • Marley Pratt • Stacy Pratt • Bill Prochnow • Sue Ellen Raby • James Raives • Alicia Raygosa • Don Reinberg • Rosenthal • Jim Ross • Elizabeth Rouan • Siobhan Ruck • Ann Ruffer • Audrey Sabol • Barbara Samuelson • Juta Savage • Elaine Schwimmer • Ashley Sexton • Rich Seymour • Susan Shane • James Shea • Jay Sheets • Jennifer Shepard • Robert Shepard • Christina Sherr • Will Shor • Jenn Shulzitski • Mitchell Skinner • Brian Smucker • Dennis Somera • Kathy Spence • Marti Spiegelman • Jude Stalker • Jennifer Stone • Hal Sugishita • Edith Summers • Jan Sutcher • Nancy Szymanski • Claire Taylor • Charles Taylor • George Teiber • Craig Tewell • Srijesh Thapa • Monica Tilley • Leslie Tribe • Terri Tyminski • Derrick Umali • John Ungar • Linda Vallee • Kathryn Van Steyn • Denise Villa • Nick Villa • Jeff Wall • Michael Weber • Marion Weeks • Simone Whitecloud • Diane Williams • Tiffany Williams • Ken Wilson • Martha Wilson • Stephen Wilson • David Wimpfheimer • Joyce Wong • David Wood • Amity Wood • Jim Yampolsky • Kai-Chung Henry Yeh • Joe 35 The Golden Gate National Parks Conser vancy is the nonprofit support partner for the Golden Gate National Parks. A membership organization, the Conser vancy was created to preser ve the Golden Gate National Parks, enhance the experiences of park visitors, and build a community dedicated to conser ving the parks for the future. To become a member, call (415) 4R-PARKS or visit www.parksconser vancy.org. About the National Park Service The National Park Ser vice was created in 1916 to preser ve America’s natural, cultural, and scenic treasures, which today number 388, and to provide for their enjoyment for future generations. For information about the Golden Gate National Parks, call (415) 561-4700, or visit www.nps.gov/goga. T H E PAC I F I C R A P TO R R E P O RT SUMMER 2003 NUMBER TWENTY-FOUR Published by Golden Gate Raptor Observatory Golden Gate National Parks Conser vancy Building 201, Fort Mason San Francisco, California 94123 N o n - p r o f i t O r g a n i z a t i o n U.S. Postage Paid San Francisco, CA Pe r m i t No 1 1 0 4