Birds of Prey

The (Brown) Pelican Brief

The streets where I live are named for California birds: Heron, Gull, Osprey, Loon, Kittiwake and, in my case, Pelican. When asked if  I ever see real pelicans on  their namesake block, I am delighted to say “Yes!”.   From early summer into fall,  briefs–—also called squadrons, pods and scoops—of Brown Pelicans glide majestically overhead.

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The Uncommon Saga of a “Common” Seabird

Over the last 175 years, common murres (pronounced murrs) have been pushed to near-extinction by greed, pollution and a warming ocean. But in a remarkable turn, the “penguins of California” are establishing new breeding colonies and laying eggs on rocks and outcroppings off  the Sonoma coast.

Despite their name, common murres are anything but ordinary. On land they waddle in dapper black-and-white plumage. Under water they dive like torpedoes. In the air, their short wings—better suited to swimming than soaring—beat furiously, whirring like wind-up toys. About the size of a football, murres spend most of the year over open water. But each Spring they return to the stony sites where they were born to cluster in densely packed colonies.

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