Annual Bird Count Confirms Trend:
Populations Continue to Decline
By Ryder W. Miller
The annual Audubon Society Christmas Bird Count found
declining numbers of birds and species diversity in
the San Francisco area again this year.
"Declining numbers have been going on for a number
of years now," said Dan Murphy, count compiler
for the Audubon Society. Speaking of the birds found
in low numbers this year, Murphy lamented, "You
could always find them, but they are now hard to find."
On Dec. 28, 101 birders searched the peninsula between
the Golden Gate Bridge and San Bruno for all the birds
they could find. Murphy reported that roughly 162 bird
species were found locally, adding up to 47,415 individual
birds.
Declining numbers were observed in the San Francisco
population of the California quail, with only seven
being observed. Bird populations found in coastal scrublands,
oak woodlands and rocky coastlines were also down. Some
of the affected species on the decline include: the
Spotted Towee, Bewick's wren, Hutton's vireo, Black
Turnstone, Ruddy Turnstone, surf bird and Wandering
tattler. There were no Oak Titmice observed this year.
The Wrentit is still extirpated (extinct) in San Francisco.
Murphy also said the number of gulls and ducks were
down.
Only small numbers of endangered and threatened species,
like the Clapper Rail (11), Peregrine Falcon (4), Common
Yellow Throat (30) and Snowy Plover (30) were observed
within the count area this year.
On the rise were opportunistic species that have adapted
well to urban environments, like the common crow, raven,
Stellar's Jay and Scrub Jay. The crow and the non-indigenous
Red-masked Parakeet population were at an all-time high.
Murphy said the declining bird trends are caused by
several factors.
"It is the urban footprint that traps them (birds).
It has isolated populations that go into tailspins and
don't make it," Murphy said.
"What we see now is a crash. It is essentially
due to isolated populations not being able to defend
themselves," he said.
The long-term fixes include the work of the Natural
Areas Program, the preservation and restoration of native
habitats and the maintenance of urban wildlife corridors.
The Audubon Societies 2004 "USA State of the Birds"
report said 23 percent of the nation's 654 birds species
were at high-risk levels. Twenty of the 43 urban bird
species analyzed are on the decline.