A Novel Locality for the Observation of Thousands of Passerine Birds during Spring Migration in Los Angeles County, California

Western Birds ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 52 (4) ◽  
pp. 322-339
Author(s):  
Ryan S. Terrill ◽  
Christine A. Dean ◽  
John Garrett ◽  
Daniel J. Maxwell ◽  
Lauren Hill ◽  
...  

Avian migration is a spectacular phenomenon, representing the annual movements of billions of birds globally. Because the greatest diversity and numbers of birds migrate at night, opportunities to observe active migration are rare. At a number of localities in North America, however, observers can quantify movements of many typically nocturnal migrants during daylight where they continue after dawn. Such locations have provided much information about species-specific phenology, status, and orientation during migration. Localities where morning flights of land birds can be observed are unevenly distributed, however, and are little reported along the Pacific coast. Here we describe a novel location for the observation of spectacular morning flights of nocturnal migrants during spring migration at Bear Divide, in the western San Gabriel Mountains, Los Angeles County, California. In two years of informal surveys at the site, we have recorded at least one morning with an estimated ~13,500 individual birds passing. Our preliminary analyses suggest that the peak of a species’ migration at Bear Divide is correlated with the latitude of a species’ breeding, being later in the spring as that latitude increases. Our data from Bear Divide provide an independent perspective on migration as quantified by local radar. Further work at this locality may help inform our knowledge of migration phenology and population trends.

The Condor ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 98 (1) ◽  
pp. 10-21 ◽  
Author(s):  
George C. Iverson ◽  
Sarah E. Warnock ◽  
Robert W. Butler ◽  
Mary Anne Bishop ◽  
Nils Warnock

1936 ◽  
Vol 30 (5) ◽  
pp. 943-950
Author(s):  
Russell M. Story

Governmental studies looking toward the reorganization of present political and administrative arrangements by Los Angeles county and Los Angeles city, respectively, have been a feature of recent months in the metropolitan region of the Pacific Southwest. Three separate reports have been prepared, two of which are before the public. Certain areas of substantial agreement in principle are found in these two reports, and it now appears that by joint agreement some far-reaching changes will be proposed as charter amendments to the Los Angeles county charter. The most significant of these proposals look toward simplification of structural arrangements through reorganization of existing governmental agencies in the county and the establishment of certain centralized agencies of county-wide administration responsible for minimum standards of service throughout the entire area and available for additional service to those local communities which through their local councils order and pay for it. Likewise, the reports agree in recommending the establishment of the county-manager form of administrative organization.


1985 ◽  
Vol 63 (10) ◽  
pp. 1779-1784 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher S. Lobban

Species of marine tube-dwelling diatoms have been identified from fresh collections made along the Pacific coast of the United States and from herbarium material originating from the Aleutian Islands to Baja California. The major species have three geographic ranges. Berkeleya rutilans is common throughout the region. Navicula pseudocomoides is common as far south as Point Conception (as are one or more species of Navicula sect. Lineolatae, not treated here). Less common in this region is Navicula delognei. Nitzschia fontifuga was found as a sporadic cohabitant of tube-forming species, especially B. rutilans. Berkeleya hyalina is a warm-water species, extending as far north as Los Angeles. Rarer tube-forming species include Haslea crucigera, Berkeleya fragilis, and B. micans.


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