• From Feathers to Forecasts: SFBBO’s Newest Program Is Leading Climate Change Adaptation Efforts in California

    From Feathers to Forecasts: SFBBO’s Newest Program Is Leading Climate Change Adaptation Efforts in California
    By Dr. Nathan Van Schmidt
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    ​Scientists have identified the two biggest threats to biodiversity as land use change (which has driven historical extinctions) and climate change (predicted to drive the greatest future extinctions). As a bird observatory in a major metropolitan area, understanding how the loss of 90% of historical tidal wetlands in the Bay Area has impacted birds has always been a central focus of SFBBO’s research. And many of our programs are studying the impact of climate change on birds—from the  threats facing phalarope habitats under the worsening droughts to impacts on the timing of migration in songbirds. ​

    ​But climate change is bigger than the impact on bird species, affecting both nature and society in myriad ways. The impacts on social systems can in turn alter processes of land use change. For example, a major reason the South Bay Salt Pond Restoration Project is restoring tidal wetlands is not just to create habitats (though this is important!) but also to buffer our human communities against flood risk under sea level rise.

    ​SFBBO’s newest research initiative is our Climate Change Program, which is taking a “big picture” look at those climate interconnections. This initiative is growing the scope of SFBBO’s research like never before. We’re studying not just birds and their habitats, but also the human dimension of climate vulnerability and adaptation—this initiative really centers the “engaging communities” aspect of our new Strategic Plan! While you may not have heard much about this program, we’ve been quite busy on it behind the scenes. We’ll be talking more about this important effort in the coming months, as we roll out community outreach efforts!

    This research program has centered on California’s Central Coast, the mountainous stretch of California between San Francisco and Los Angeles. This region is dominated by natural landscapes, including iconic natural areas like the Big Sur coast and Pinnacles National Park. But in places like the Paso Robles region of the Salinas Valley, these stretching grasslands, woodlands, and forests are being lost to but major expansions of vineyards. Worse, agricultural expansion and intensification is worsening an already serious unsustainable overextraction of groundwater, which the Central Coast—isolated from the snowpack and reservoirs of the Sierras—is almost entirely dependent upon for maintaining agriculture, domestic use, and groundwater-dependent wetlands. The nexus between climate change, land use, water supplies, and the sustainability of both human and ecological communities is thus tightly linked in this region.
    Our first big achievement has been developing (in coordination with the US Geological Survey) the newest version of LUCAS, a tool to jointly forecast future climate, land development, water availability, and carbon emissions, including feedbacks such as droughts reducing the extent of agriculture. Our recently published results indicate the current groundwater sustainability crisis is poised to become worse under climate change and future development. We examined alternative implementations of California’s landmark Sustainable Groundwater Management Act, which mandates water management agencies across the state to design strategies to achieve groundwater sustainability. Our forecasts with LUCAS have revealed the sobering possibility that efforts to increase water supply through technologies like desalination could encourage further development and overuse. In contrast, strategies that prioritized reducing groundwater withdrawals (for example, with a cap-and-trade system to groundwater pumping) were far more effective at securing sustainable water for both humans and nature.

    ​Yet even this had a trade-off: regulating water pumping displaced even more of the agricultural expansion into unregulated, outlying natural areas that are currently relatively pristine. This research highlights the complexity of climate adaptation. It isn’t just about technology or policy in isolation; decisions in one arena ripple into another. The key takeaway is that we need to pair smart water conservation efforts with smart land conservation efforts. By working directly with land use planners and water agencies, we ensured that our findings were not just theoretical but usable. The spatial data our staff generated—projecting development and water use patterns into 2061 under each alternative policy–
    have been made publicly available to support sustainable planning across the Central Coast.
    But that first effort was just setting the stage for deeper involvement in California’s climate change adaptation effort: SFBBO is co-leading (along with social scientists at UC-Santa Cruz) the Central Coast Regional Report for the newest California Climate Change Assessment. Part of a sweeping state initiative to synthesize the best available science across every possible aspect of climate change impacts and adaptation, our work on the Regional Report aims specifically to inform local adaptation efforts by communities. Nathan is leading the Climate Analysis Coordination workgroup, facilitating the dozens of researchers working on the nine Regional Reports to collaborate in designing and coding the best possible sets of climate change measures to represent future on-the-ground risks across California.

    ​We are also wrangling dozens of scientists to write the “Natural Lands” section, highlighting how climate change is impacting the Central Coast’s diverse habitats—from forests and grasslands to tidal estuaries and kelp forests. But this effort is not just about scientific research on ecosystems; it’s also about ensuring that those most vulnerable to climate impacts have their voices heard and their knowledge reflected in the report. SFBBO staff are spearheading outreach efforts to the two dozen Native American tribes within the region, while our partners at 
    Regeneración are coordinating engagement with farmworker communities.

    If you or someone you know is living, working, or has roots in the Central Coast, you can contribute to this report too! Please fill out this form to share your perspective. By bringing communities together in conservations, we hope to build the partnerships needed to ensure California’s natural and human communities thrive in the decades ahead.
  • Bilingual Bird Walk

    Bilingual Bird Walk
    By SFBBO Education Program Manager Laura Echavez Montenegro
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    ¡Estamos en primavera! La perfecta temporada para pajarear en la bahía.

    In early March, we teamed up with Latino Outdoors to co-host a bilingual birding walk at Alviso Marina County Park.

    ​Participants spotted at least 18 species that included a mix of shorebirds, raptors, and songbirds. 

    ​Folks enjoyed a beautiful morning and front row seats to a rambunctious Northern Mockingbird, a mixed kettle of Turkey Vultures and White Pelicans riding thermals, and a Sora foraging within the slough.

    Throughout the walk, I shared tidbits of bird identification and habitat restoration in English and Spanish, making this an inclusive and welcoming experience for all participants, particularly Latino families and beginner birders.

    This is our second bilingual walk in partnership with Latino Outdoors in 2025. We hope to bring more opportunities like this to the community in the future, so stay tuned! (photos by Aurora Cortes, Latino Outdoors)
  • Helping Find a New Home for Herons in Oakland

    Helping Find a New Home for Herons in Oakland
    By SFBBO Director or Waterbird Science Dr. Nathan Van Schmidt
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    ​Why do Black-crowned Night Herons love city life? That was the question of one of SFBBO’s recent research efforts. Downtown areas in several cities of the Bay Area, including Oakland and Santa Rosa, have become unexpected homes for Black-crowned Night Herons. These striking birds once nested around Oakland’s Jack London Square and Lake Merritt parks, but tree and shrub trimming there in the past decades have pushed them to form nesting colonies in the trees of the Chinatown neighborhood.

    ​However, this has led to ongoing challenges for both the community and the birds, with their droppings covering sidewalks, businesses, and parked cars, and young herons sometimes falling onto busy streets. Efforts to relocate them back to Lake Merritt have had limited success, raising the question: what makes these urban trees so appealing to the herons?

    Last summer, SFBBO intern Bella Nunez-Garro sought to answer this by examining the herons’ nesting preferences, focusing on tree species, canopy cover, and surrounding environmental factors. We hypothesized they might be drawn in by particular tree characteristics, or potentially easier access to food from human refuse – more than a few herons have been observed going after discarded fast food! Bella found that the birds almost exclusively favored two non-native trees, the Chinese banyan and Brazilian peppertree.

    ​Despite being non-native, the herons seem to love these trees for nesting because they offer wide canopies with thick leaf coverage, which may provide stable nesting spots that are safer from predators. There was also evidence the birds preferred shorter trees. The presence of trash near nesting sites was linked to higher nest occupancy, confirming our suspicion that waste food may be providing an unintended food source, but this wasn’t nearly as important as tree species. These insights have major implications for urban planning and wildlife management.

    By better understanding what draws these birds to urban spaces, the city has a chance to create a future where both people and herons can coexist more harmoniously. Unfortunately, several of the nesting colony trees were removed this winter due to a BART station redevelopment project. Tree removal rarely has been observed to help this issue, as the birds simply nest in other nearby trees – after all, the removal of their nesting colonies is what made them move downtown in the first place! If Oakland wants to reduce conflicts while protecting the herons, our results indicate a strategic approach to tree planting and maintenance could help. Planting trees with heron-friendly canopies near Lake Merritt could encourage them to nest in more suitable areas, while choosing different tree species for Chinatown might make those locations less attractive for nesting.
    ​SFBBO partnered with other organizations wanting to help these birds – Oakland Zoo, International Bird Rescue, Golden Gate Audubon, and California Fish & Game – and brought these concerns to the City of Oakland’s arborists to help devise a plan to encourage these birds to move into a better home. At that meeting (meeting participants shown above) we devised a plan to plant the Chinese banyan and Brazilian peppertree tree species herons love in a neglected nearby strip of green space by the slough. The planned planting site (photo below) is just three blocks from current colony sites and adjacent to water, both of which we hope will make it attractive to the birds – especially if we plant trees they’re already familiar with nesting in! It is also directly between Laney and Peralta Community Colleges, providing a potentially great spot to engage students in wildlife classroom activities.

    ​The tree planting will begin in earnest next fall, during the optimal season for planting. In the meantime, SFBBO biologists will continue this spring and summer to refine our analysis with a second season of data collection. We are particularly curious to see if the birds that had nested in the BART station’s Brazilian peppertrees that were removed will renest in adjacent trees, or find the same species elsewhere in the city. Our hard-working community volunteers are already out tracking the new nests across Oakland as the birds begin their breeding season! 
  • Special Snowy Plover Mud Stomp

    Special Snowy Plover Mud Stomp
    By SFBBO Science Director Maddy Schwarz
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    On March 8 we hosted a very special Snowy Plover Mud Stomp volunteer day at Eden Landing Ecological Reserve in Hayward to install cutting edge Motus technology.

    Motus tags are a type of radio transmitter that send signals to nearby radio antennas. A single Motus station was established at Eden Landing in November 2021 which receives data from any tags on birds and other wildlife and some insects it picks up within 30 kilometers.

    However, because it’s only one antenna, it’s impossible to triangulate the exact location of the tags it registers. 

    Because we wanted more than just presence/absence data and to get fine-scale movement data, at the Mud Stomp we established a grid of “nodes,” which are essentially miniature receivers that will collect data from the tags and transmit it to the full-size ​antenna. The nodes will transmit their data to the main Motus station, which will in turn post the data online, allowing us to view where tagged birds are in real time. 

    At the Mud Stomp, seven volunteers and partners from H.T. Harvey and Associates and Avocet Research Associates helped our staff set up 56 nodes, using rebar and conduit sheath, on posts situated along a grid that covers the entire areas of Ponds E14 and E6B.
    The next step is to finish the retrofit of the Motus tower south of Pond E14 by adding the omnidirectional antenna. Then, we’ll hopefully begin tagging plovers in June! 

    This is part of our first ever U.S. Western Snowy Plover Motus tagging study, which we are undertaking this year. Although this is only a small exploratory study, we are hoping to learn more about where plovers go at night, where the most popular places for broods to spend time on the ponds are, and how soon a female starts a new nest once the current one is no longer active. 

    You can read more about this technology on the Motus Wildlife Tracking System website(photos below by Joe Montes)
  • A New Season Starts at our Banding Station at Stanford’s Jasper Ridge

    A New Season Starts at our Banding Station at Stanford’s Jasper Ridge
    By Science Director Dr. Katie LaBarbara
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    On February 24th, 2025, the Landbirds Program opened our banding site at Stanford’s Jasper Ridge ‘Ootchamin ‘Ooyakma for 2025. The JR’O’O site floods each winter and is re-opened each spring, with the goal of restarting banding before the Wilson’s Warblers arrive for breeding. 

    ​SFBBO started bird banding at JR’O’O in 2018 in collaboration with then-undergraduate Julian Tattoni, and students have remained a big part of our presence there: t
    he JR’O’O site is part of our involvement in the Student Opportunities in Avian Research initiative to give undergraduates from local universities and community colleges experience in ornithological field work.

    During this first 2025 banding day, undergraduates Maya Xu and Marty Freeland got the full field experience with Science Director Katie LaBarbera, hiking through deep mud underneath branches just starting to leaf out but already full of birdsong. In addition, this young male Oregon Junco (pictured below) was among the first birds of the year banded at the site.
    Katie LaBarbara is a science director at SFBBO who specializes in landbird research and conservation. One of their primary responsibilities at SFBBO is managing the long-running bird banding program at Coyote Creek Field Station. Katie received a Ph.D. in Integrative Biology at UC Berkeley, studying life history variation in Dark-eyed Juncos in the Sierra Nevada mountains. They subsequently taught at UC Berkeley, then detoured to beautiful Minnesota to study tree frog communication before joining the team at SFBBO.
  • University Students Explore Tidal Marsh Ecology

    University Students Explore Tidal Marsh Ecology
    By SFBBO Science Director Eric Lynch
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    On February 6th, 2025, SFBBO’s Habitat Conservation team partnered with Keep Coyote Creek Beautiful to host San Jose State University’s Field Studies in Water Resource Management class at our restoration site near Mallard Slough and Pond A16 in Alviso.

    ​The students braved some wet, windy, and muddy conditions while adding 175 native plants to our restoration site. SFBBO staff and the students discussed some of the major conservation issues affecting San Francisco Bay’s tidal marshes. 

    Students also learned about the dual focus of this project which seeks to improve tidal marsh-upland transition zone habitat along Mallard Slough and pond-adjacent habitat along Pond A16. Both aspects of the project involve replacing invasive plants with local, native species.

    Along Mallard Slough the goal is to create dense, year round vegetation to provide high-tide refugia for tidal marsh species, while the work adjacent to Pond A16 is designed to create a low-growing native plant community that will compete well with invasive plants while providing minimal cover for terrestrial predators of shorebirds and waterfowl.

    The SJSU class was led by Dr. Costanza Rampini, who has regularly brought her classes to help participate in SFBBO habitat restoration over the years.

    “The students and I had fun planting native species near Mallard Slough and Pond A16 in Alviso and we learned a lot,” 
    Dr. Rampini said. “It was also a great team bonding exercise, and despite the cold and rainy weather, my students were all smiles by the end of the day.” 
    This project is funded primarily through a grant from Valley Water, but has also received funding from Cargill and other SFBBO donors. We are very fortunate to have enjoyed the support of our partners at Keep Coyote Creek Beautiful for all of the volunteer events associated with this project.
    ​​Eric Lynch a science director at SFBBO who specializes in habitat restoration. He received his B.A. in English and American Literature at Harvard University in 2009 and an A.S. degree from West Valley College’s Park Management Program. In 2018, he left SFBBO to pursue a master’s degree at Sonoma State focused on raptor migration phenology at the Golden Gate Raptor Observatory, where he is a longtime volunteer, and later returned to his beloved South Bay to continue working to improve the relationship between humans and the environment through conservation, restoration, research, and outreach.
  • Volunteers Key to 40-Plus Years of Bird Banding Research at the Coyote Creek Field Station

    Volunteers Key to 40-Plus Years of Bird Banding Research at the Coyote Creek Field Station
    By Science Director Katie LaBarbera
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    We could not run the bird banding program at Coyote Creek Field Station without our volunteers.

    More than 60 volunteers participate in this three-days-a-week, 52-weeks-a-year data collection program, contributing their time, expertise, and nimble fingers to increasing our understanding of local bird populations.

    Their work directly feeds important research, such as the paper published last May showing that wildfire smoke changed bird health and behavior at CCFS.

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    One of my favorite things about the volunteer program is that it includes people from many different backgrounds: students and retirees, scientists and artists, people who birded as children and people who discovered birds at age 65.

    Some volunteers come to CCFS to start their careers in wildlife, others come to spend time in the woods. New volunteers are trained by experienced volunteers (and by SFBBO staff), and we all learn from each other. 

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    Maya, an undergraduate student, works with an Anna’s Hummingbird.

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    One of our volunteers, S.B., is both new and experienced: she started volunteering last year, but 30 years earlier had participated in the earliest days of the banding program as a graduate student.

    ​Last week at the field station we found datasheets, yellowed with age, in which she recognized her own handwriting. The birds she handles now may be the great-great-great-great-[24 more greats]-grandchildren of birds she banded back then! 

    (photo left: 
    S.B. looks at her own handwriting from 1986).

    The bird banding volunteer program is currently full, but you can join the waitlist or check out one of SFBBO’s other volunteer programs.

  • 2024 Plover and Tern Program Update

    2024 Plover and Tern Program Update
    By SFBBO Education Specialist Laura Echavez Montenegro
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    This year, we monitored 328 Snowy Plover nests—our second highest total since we began in 2008, and just shy of the record set in 2017. It was a season full of both challenges and triumphs. We observed 510 chicks hatch, and despite the harsh reality of a 41% depredation rate—due to a mix of predators like ravens, harriers, red foxes, and feral cats—72 plover chicks fledged!

    As for our banding efforts, we had one of our most successful seasons to date. A total of 232 chicks and 42 adults were banded, providing us with valuable data for ongoing research on dispersal, survival, reproductive success, and so much more. We look forward to exciting research, such as with our Motus tracking project in 2025!

    Chick spotlight! – For the first time in the history of our program, we observed a fully leucistic Snowy Plover chick! Leucism is a genetic condition that results in the loss of pigment in the skin, feathers, and other tissues. Although we were not able to confirm whether it fledged or not, we are hopeful that this little one made it! (Photos by Josh Scullen).

    It was a slow season for the Least Terns. With the assistance of a dedicated team of volunteers, we monitored a total of 9 nests at Eden Landing Ecological Reserve (4 nests in the northern area and 5 nests in the southern area). Only one of those nests hatched two chicks that were likely depredated and did not fledge. However, a lot of adults and juveniles from nearby colonies used ELER as a stopover site during dispersal and migration! On multiple occasions we observed between 50-80 individuals foraging and roosting in the area.
  • Volunteer Spotlight – Donna Nicoletti

    Volunteer Spotlight – Donna Nicoletti
    Almost 20 years in the field for SFBBO!
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    Since 2005, Donna Nicoletti has been an active and dedicated member of our volunteer community, contributing her time to a wide range of science programs at SFBBO. Her first volunteer experience involved conducting power line surveys in Coyote Creek and she quickly became a key participant in colonial waterbird surveys, covering HEP and GUTE colonies across the Bay. In addition to these efforts, her work on the Pacific Flyway Shorebird Surveys and Western Snowy Plover conservation at Eden Landing has made a lasting impact on our mission. We are truly grateful for Donna’s unwavering commitment to our avian science programs and we wish her many great years of birding ahead in her new home beyond the bay area. Below is an interview, where she reflects on her time as a volunteer. 

    How many years have you been volunteering, and which programs have you participated in?

    I started volunteering in about 2005 when I moved to Redwood Shores. The very first survey was the Power Line Surveys in Coyote Creek.  After that, I primarily volunteered for CWB surveys.  I covered various GUTE and HEP colonies in San Francisco, PA Baylands, Mountain View and Redwood Shores.  I also did the annual Pacific Flyway Shorebird Survey in PA Baylands, ponds G20 and G21.  One year, I think it was 2006, I did a Gull survey in the south bay salt ponds with Cheryl Strong. That was wild. I also volunteered for a few years for oyster shell duty in Eden Landing for Western Snowy Plovers with Caitlyn Nilsen.

    Can you share a bit about your birding background and what initially drew you to volunteering for SFBBO?

    I don’t have a science background but my grandmother, who was an Italian immigrant, was fond of backyard birds and piqued my interest in local birds.  What initially drew me to volunteer for SFBBO was a typical “lifer” experience.  I love to hike and on a hike one day along a levy in Belmont Slough, I came across a breeding colony of FOTE on an island in a seasonal pond.  The birds were raucous and wild, and several adults tried to attack me.  I was hooked!  I wanted to learn about those birds, so as soon as I got back home, I looked up bird organizations in the South Bay and that’s how I found SFBBO.    


    Over the past 18 years, what are some of the most memorable projects or experiences you’ve had? Are there any specific stories that come to mind?

    Many stories! Here are a few:

    • My first CWB colony was a CATE colony in Agua Vista Park in San Francisco. A large colony of CATE used an old, abandoned wooden boat dock in Mission Bay for their breeding substrate. The dock was originally built in the early 1900s for the shipbuilding industry, so the platform was, by that point, very dilapidated. I couldn’t believe the birds found and used such an unlikely nesting location. I counted the colony for about four years. Each successive year when I arrived for the first survey in March, I found more sections of the dock had fallen into the water over the winter. The CATE colony continued using it for nesting even in its fragile state. I brought the dock to the attention of both Golden Gate Audubon and SFBBO. The last few years of the survey, I assisted both organizations to try to persuade the San Francisco Port Authority to repair the dock or provide another nearby substrate for them.  Unfortunately, the Port Authority determined that it wasn’t feasible for them to make any changes, but the process provided me with an education in California and U.S. migratory bird protection laws and the intricacies of working with government agencies in conservation efforts. Eventually the dock completely collapsed in the water, and the colony must have dispersed elsewhere.
     
    • The first survey I was involved with was part of the PG&E Power Line Program in Coyote Creek. The survey was very important as the biologists were tracking bird collisions with power lines and monitoring the effectiveness of marked vs. unmarked lines. The surveys were done at sunset and sunrise. I was on sunset duty. The groups would sit out in fields in camping chairs and keep watch with night vision goggles. That was the first (and last) time I used them! It was fun and fascinating for a first-time volunteer. The SFBBO biologists were terrific and took time to explain the details of the survey to me. I learned a lot about science-based data collection, and it was a wonderful introduction to bird surveys.  
     
    • For the Pacific Flyway Survey, one year, 2014, my partner and I counted 1184 birds. It was like a bonanza of shorebirds; we had never counted that many birds previously on the fall survey.  

    How have you shared your experiences, or the things you’ve learned while volunteering with friends, family or community members?

    Most people are stumped when I tell them I volunteer to count birds. This is definitely not your typical volunteer activity! I usually get questions about how the counting process is done. I’ve found that generally people are unfamiliar with local bird species even though they may pass bird habitats every day. When I’m out in the field on a survey and people stop and ask me what I’m looking at, I always advocate for SFBBO and the work we are doing in the South Bay. I think those of us who perform the surveys are pretty unique. You must love the outdoors, be patient and thoughtful, work independently and truly care about birds.   


    How has your experience with nest monitoring influenced your perspective on science, birds or enriched your personal life?

    So many ways. Seeing birds through my spotting scope has given me such an intimate connection to individual birds and the fragile lives they live. I am still in awe of how they manage to come back every year to breed in the same place, seemingly against all odds. I also think the breeding season is a microcosm of a human family in a time lapse of a few months. Each stage, from nest building, egg laying, hatching and feeding hungry chicks is a mirror of our lives. I especially love it when I see juveniles take their first steps toward independence; they look and act just like human teenagers!

    And I’m quite sure the years of keeping track of the details of colony stages has trained my brain to think in more science-based ways.   

    Have you learned anything during your time volunteering that you think will enrich you in the future?

    After over 40 years of living in the Bay Area, I now live in the Sacramento Valley, and want to continue volunteering with conservation organizations here. I live close to the American River and Sacramento County has several refuge areas for Pacific Flyway birds. I am excited to learn about different species that live or migrate here.

    Anything else that you’d like to share about your experience as a volunteer?

    I just want to add that I have enormous respect for the biologists, support team and board of directors at SFBBO. SFBBO has been steadfast in their mission while facing the economic pressures of sustaining a nonprofit. I truly appreciate the work and dedication of everyone at SFBBO and I am very grateful for the opportunity this organization has given me to have a small impact on San Francisco Bay birds. 

  • Volunteer Spotlight – Chuck Coston

    Volunteer Spotlight – Chuck Coston
    More than 30 years in the field for SFBBO!
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    On the eve of his retirement as a volunteer for SFBBO, we interviewed Chuck Coston to learn how he got involved in SFBBO and his most memorable experiences with us. Read below to see his responses. You can also read a great article about him in the local publication “Climate.” Thank you, Chuck, for your more than 30 years as a volunteer in our Colonial Waterbird and Outreach programs, it is because of people like you that we are able to meet our mission for birds, habitats, and communities!

    How many years have you been volunteering, and which programs have you participated in?
     
    I don’t know what year I first volunteered for SFBBO, nor do I know what the first program was. It was a one-day excursion in the field with a group, and that’s all I remember. I know it was probably about 1987. The first program where I was alone in the field was the High Tide Shorebird Resting Study, where I surveyed for resting shorebirds during high tide, walking the dikes anti-clockwise from near the mouth of Steinburger Slough to Shell Parkway on Belmont Slough, then back on trails (no housing then). I did this two years. The second year, in the spring, I was asked to include a survey of 12 or so GBHE nests on the power towers along Steinburger Slough. I was given a form and told how to fill it out – five minute training. I monitored the Steinburger power towers from then on. 

    In April of the second year of monitoring the Stienburger colony, the extensive SNEG and BCNH colonies on Bair Island (south of Steinburger) collapsed. I never learned why. Many of the pairs quickly occupied the trees on the bay side of the Redwood Shores (now Silicon Valley Clean Water, “SVCW” water treatment plant). Since I was close, I agreed to monitor that colony. I suddenly had about 150 BCNH and 200 SNEG nests to survey. Trial by fire! I have monitored  the SVCW  colony through many stages thereafter. 
     
    Sometime around 1997 a colony of FOTE formed along Belmont Slough near Shell Parkway. I monitored it for two years, then it disappeared. About 2006 some FOTE moved onto some small islands in a pond west of the SVCW plant. They lasted three years, but foliage on the islands overwhelmed the birds (guano fertilized?). Intermittently for about five years from 2014 to 2020, I monitored the FOTEs that colonized the islands in the largest pond west of the SVCW plant.  The SVCW folks have filled in the pond and built more plant apparatus thereon.  

    ​How did you learn about SFBBO?

    I grew up in a small town in Oregon, and spent most of my childhood outdoors. I learned the names of some common birds from my mother, but the big trigger event was in graduate school. Joan (now my wife) and I often ate lunch together in a small park in south Chicago. One day several intriguing birds appeared.  Instead of returning to the lab, I visited the bookstore, and found Peterson’s Field Guide to the Birds of Eastern North America. It awoke my bird passion. Oh, the mystery birds were Slate Colored Juncos. Joan and I often went birding thereafter, and 60+ years later we still go when the energy is there. I heard about SFBBO at an SCVAS meeting. My interests run to research, and SFBBO sounded like it fit. It took a few years for me to become active.  

    ​Over the past 30 years, what are some of the most memorable experiences you’ve had? Are there any specific stories that come to mind?

    I will always remember the good will and strong interest in the bird’s success from everyone I met in the SVCW plant. They were protective of the nesting birds, and always wanted to know how things were going.    
              
    The demise of the GBHE colony on the Steinburger power towers was painful. GBHEs varied between six and 10 nests for about 15 years. Then one year, in the middle of nesting season, several antennas were installed on the towers, and the colonies of  GBHE and DCCO south of the slough both failed (north had no GBHE then). Numbers of DCCO recovered, but GBHEs dwindled, until only one remained. It had a nearly fledged chick, but the next visit found a TUVU cleaning up the last of the nest contents. No GBHE nesting since then. 

    The towers north of the slough had CORA nests about four times, but the most impressive non-colonial nesting was a pair of OSPR. From 2021 to 2023 they occupied the highest nest platform on the right-hand tower south of the Slough (did not return this year). Twice they apparently fledged one chick. 

    The SVCW colony tends to be noisier as the season progresses, but loudest was the time a Red-tailed Hawk blundered into one of the nesting trees. Every close adult bird erupted and the hawk quickly got the message – scram! 

    Twice the SVCW colony collapsed, and was dormant for a year or two. I am impressed by the site loyalty. A number of trees were removed, and facilities built up on both sides of the tree row, but the birds hung in there, nesting this year was very successful. It’s always gratifying to see several not-quite-fledged chicks scrambling on the trees.