Stints, Baird’s & other birds, Malibu Lagoon, 22 August 2021

[Posted by Chuck Almdale]

Barn Swallow feeding time (Ray Juncosa 8-22-21)
Hexagonal mouths? Who knew?

August can be excruciatingly hot. At least in theory. In actual practice on seaside Sunday mornings it’s quite pleasant. Today was slightly foggy—that’s our famous SoCal morning fog “burning off by noon.” The temperature was at 68°F at 0830, and 73°F at 1130. That is only slightly below the typical late August morning.

View towards beach & east colony from meeting place.
A break in the algae. (Lillian Johnson 8-22-21)

For the 13-year period 2009-21:
Temperature at 0830 ranged 63-72°F, average 68.3°F
Temperature at 1130 ranged 68-81°F, average 75.5°F.
Nothing to complain about there.
Then check back at 1700, after the temperature’s gone past 100°F.

An early arrival for this Ruddy Duck (Chris Tosdevin 8-22-21)

Migrants from the north and possibly elsewhere continue to drop into the lagoon. We keep seeing reports of a Reddish Egret hopping around at the lagoon, but no one I personally know has ever been there at the right time to spot it. One of our birders keeps leapfrogging it: it’s there on Thursday, he’s there on Friday, it’s there on Saturday, he’s there on Sunday. So it goes, as Kurt Vonnegut frequently observed.

Barring on the back of this Spotted Sandpiper (Ray Juncosa 8-22-21)

Our total species count popped up to 62 from July’s 40 and June’s yearly low of 34 species. Most Mallards and Gadwall have left, now that they have grown flight feathers and can fly, and the numbers of gulls, terns, cormorants and pelicans dropped. The shorebirds jumped up though: 341 birds in 17 species versus July’s 138 birds in 9 species.

The lagoon water level was high: 7’8.4″ on the tidal clock.

Black-crowned Night-Heron adult & juvenile (Ray Juncosa 8-22-21)

We dawdled at the meeting point, waiting for another group to vacate our next stop, the viewpoint near the Pacific Coast Hwy bridge. We didn’t want to be crowded, due to—you know—the current Covid-19 Delta variant explosion in infected, sick and dying.

And this is where a typical relaxed August morning’s birding took a sharp left turn.

Lots of algae at this end of the channel; picnic area & Malibu Colony in background, view from meeting place. (Lillian Johnson 8-22-21)

We were sorting through a small group of about a dozen shorebirds wandering around on the thick algae coating the channel. Mostly Western and Least Sandpipers, at least 75 yards away and sunward, so we’re squinting to see color and patterns.

Western (L) and Least (R) Sandpipers (Ray Juncosa 8-22-21)

We picked out a couple of Baird’s Sandpipers, which tend to show up in small numbers at this season. Baird’s normally travel south from their high Arctic breeding grounds via the central flyway—Mississippi River and Great Plains—but a few always wander out our way. They’re about one inch longer than the 6.5” Western Sandpiper, which itself is 0.25-.50” larger than the Least Sandpiper (the world’s smallest sandpiper). Baird’s have shorter, straighter bills than the Western, and an odd yellowish color on their breasts and heads, with thin dark streaks running vertically through the yellow breast.

The elusive Baird’s Sandpiper out on the algae (Ray Juncosa 8-22-21)

Chris Lord got our attention (not everyone at once) when he said: “I think one of those Baird’s has a darker throat, sort of orange or reddish…not really yellow. Maybe you should take a look at it. It might be something different.” So we all—one by one—figured out where it was and watched it through out binoculars and several scopes, as it walked around, poking at tiny invertebrates on the surface of the algae. Views weren’t wonderful.

Red-necked Stint, 1st sighting. Malibu Lagoon
(Photo: Chris Tosdevin, 8-22-21, time: approx 08:58)
This could be a late-in-life Claude Monet painting.

Chris Tosdevin commented at some point: “There are little dark spots on the breast below the orange.” Chris Lord said that was a good mark to remember.

Red-necked Stint and Western Sandpiper behind. Malibu Lagoon
(Photo: Femi Faminu, 8-22-21, time: 08:58)

After several minutes of squinting sunward at the bird, we had decided: the color of the throat was decidedly darker in an orange or reddish or rufous sort of way; the bill was definitely short, almost straight, and thicker than the thin bill of the Least Sandpipers; the wings seemed longer than the tail although we couldn’t see the tail to judge how much longer, there were some flecks of rufous in the scapulars (back); the bird was not larger than the Western Sandpiper, possibly slightly smaller.

Black-bellied Plover plumage stages (Ray Juncosa 8-22-21)

One of our group, either Lillian or me, commented, “Maybe it’s a Red-necked Stint. [Ha ha ha.] It sort of looks like one. [Ha ha ha.]” At some point, recalls Chris L, he asked me what my candidate species were and I said Red-necked Stint, which got him looking at his Sibley. We were all now taking turns checking through my National Geographic Field Guide to the Birds of North America and Chris L.’s copy of Sibley’s Field Guide to Birds of Western North America. I don’t think anyone was ready to take this suggestion seriously; not because it didn’t look like a Red-necked Stint—it did—but because it was so galfangled rare.

Coming and going, Western Gull and Sanderlings (Ray Juncosa 8-22-21)

After a few more minutes we were slowly moving towards thinking maybe that was not an absurd speculation after all and the bird actually was a Red-necked Stint, a species none of us had ever seen in North America. Lillian and I had seen a few of them in 1988-89, thirty-three years ago, in Singapore, Australia and New Zealand, when it was in basic (non-breeding or Winter) plumage, lacking any trace of red. Many of the others had never seen one at all. So…not a lot of experience in our group with this species. We’re starting to agree among ourselves that yeah, maybe it really is a Red-necked Stint, what do you think?, too bad it’s so far away, any chance at getting a photo?, and I’m looking at the bird through the telescope when it flies out of the field of view, heading west towards the private golf course.

It didn’t land, it didn’t come back. We waited 5-10 minutes but it was gone. Cue moans and groans.

Western Pygmy Blue Butterfly, Brephidium exilis, Malibu Lagoon (Chris Tosdevin 8-22-21) The smallest butterfly in the world with wing-span of 3/8ths to 3/4ths of an inch. Many live in the brush around the lagoon, almost too tiny to see.

Black-crowned Night-Heron & Great Egret (Ray Juncosa 8-22-21)

We then continued on our usual route, heading east to the viewspot near the PCH bridge. There we found a few ducks and saw a lot of shorebirds—Willets, Whimbrels, a Spotted Sandpiper, peeps, Black-bellied Plovers, a Least Tern and two Caspian Terns, a few gulls and cormorants and some scurrying Snowy Plovers—far across the lagoon to the south, on the lagoon shore of the beach. So we headed back around the lagoon to get a closer look at them.

Birds on the south lagoon sand spit (Ray Juncosa 8-22-21)

We birded as we went, as always. Four species of egret/heron, some Killdeer, Anna’s and Allen’s Hummingbird, a moblet of Bushtits, House Finches, several Common Yellowthroats, a Mockingbird, Black Phoebes, Starlings, Great-tailed Grackles. The usual suspects.

We made our way through the beach crowd enraptured by large, surfer-covered waves, and to the SE corner of the lagoon, past the long flock of gulls, Double-crested Cormorants, Brown Pelican and the many larger shorebirds including Willet, Whimbrel, Marbled Godwit and Black-bellied Plovers. Here, walking on the algae coat, were about 150 peeps—small shorebirds like Western and Least Sandpiper, Sanderling, Dunlin, Ruddy Turnstone, Semipalmated Plover and two Short-billed Dowitcher. Nearby, in the sand, were about thirty Snowy Plovers, doing their best to dodge the many zombified beachwalkers oblivious to the presence of tiny sandpipers underfoot.

View towards beach from viewpoint by PCH bridge.
Main lagoon is mostly clear of algae. (Lillian Johnson 8-22-21)

Among the peeps on the algae were a few Baird’s Sandpipers and far out, near the edge of the algal mat, two Red-necked Phalaropes. Unbeknownst to us, Chris Lord was vigorously scope-combing one-by-one through the peeps for the “stint,” subjecting them to this analysis: “It was the only bird I sought in those peeps. I used a yes/no screen until I got to yes! I called our attention to it, ‘That orangey bird is right in front of us,’ then gave better directions.”

Red-necked Stint. Malibu Lagoon (Photo: Chris Tosdevin, 8-22-21, time: 10:01:11)

I waved in the few members of our group who were off chatting, and we all got on the bird for at least 40 minutes. The light was better at this angle, the bird was closer, and we slowly became more certain that it was indeed a Red-necked Stint. Not convinced, just more certain. Several of us got photos.

Red-necked Stint. Malibu Lagoon (Photo: Chris Tosdevin, 8-22-21, time: 10:25:02)

Chris Lord recollects: “As we discussed the bird’s field marks, all indicated Red-necked Stint. I also pointed out that nothing we’d seen made it not a Red-necked Stint except the unlikelihood of its being in Malibu. I should have quoted (but didn’t) my uncle Ralph, the first bird watcher I knew or even heard of, who would say about finding an unlikely oddity, ‘Well you know they have wings, and they fly.’ However anybody else saw and described the color, it was always—rightly or wrongly—orangey to me, never rufous or otherwise.”

Size comparison of Red-necked Stint and closer Western Sandpiper.
Malibu Lagoon (Photo: Femi Faminu, 8-22-21, time: 11:08)

Most of us don’t carry phones (what’s the collective noun for Luddites?—how about A smashing of Luddites) and no one had anyone we could call anyway. So I suggested to Chris T. that he send some photos off to Kimball Garrett at the L.A. County Museum of Natural History when he got home. He did that, posted the sighting with some photos into eBird and after Kimball confirmed the sighting as Red-necked Stint, Chris sent a note to the manager of LA County weekly rare bird report.

Short-billed Dowitchers (Chris Tosdevin 8-22-21)

Apparently others were interested in seeing this bird, and a few people showed up before dawn the next day (Monday, 23 August). It (or another Red-necked Stint just like it) was relocated around 0810. Three days later, it’s still there. As of blog posting time, it was last reported to LACoBirds hot line on Weds. 25 Aug, and last reported to eBird on 26 Aug at 7:26am., the 71st such reporting
Link to Malibu Lagoon on eBird

Ruddy Turnstone plumage variations (Ray Juncosa 8-22-21)

Birds new for the season: Ruddy Duck, Marbled Godwit, Red-necked Stint, Sanderling, Dunlin, Baird’s Sandpiper, Short-billed Dowitcher, Spotted Sandpiper, Willet, Glaucous-winged Gull, Least Tern, Pelagic Cormorant, Red-shouldered Hawk, Belted Kingfisher, Rough-winged Swallow, Wrentit, Lesser Goldfinch, Spotted Towhee, California Towhee.

Two plovers: Semipalmated and Western Snowy (ringed g:y/g) (Chris Tostevin 8-22-21)

Many thanks to photographers: Femi Faminu, Lillian Johnson, Ray Juncosa & Chris Tosdevin

Two Red-necked Phalaropes (Chris Tosdevin 8-25-21)

The next SMBAS scheduled field trips: Maybe January 2022. Wear your masks, get your shots, and maybe someday we can have organized trips again.

The next SMBAS program: Zoom Evening Meeting, Topic TBA, early October, 7:30 p.m.

The SMBAS 10 a.m. Parent’s & Kids Birdwalk remains canceled until further notice due to the near-impossibility of maintained proper masked social distancing with parents and small children.

Links: Unusual birds at Malibu Lagoon
9/23/02 Aerial photo of Malibu Lagoon

Prior checklists:
2021: Jan-July

2020: Jan-JulyJuly-Dec  2019: Jan-June, July-Dec  
2018: Jan-June, July-Dec  2017: Jan-June, July-Dec
2016: Jan-June, July-Dec  2015: Jan-May, July-Dec
2014: Jan-July,  July-Dec  2013: Jan-June, July-Dec
2012: Jan-June, July -Dec 2011: Jan-June, July-Dec
2010: Jan-June, July-Dec  2009: Jan-June, July-Dec.

The 10-year comparison summaries created during the Lagoon Reconfiguration Project period, remain available—despite numerous complaints—on our Lagoon Project Bird Census Page. Very briefly summarized, the results unexpectedly indicate that avian species diversification and numbers improved slightly during the restoration period June’12-June’14.

Many thanks to Jean Garrett, Lillian Johnson, Ray Juncosa, Chris Lord, Chris Tosdevin, Ruth Tosdevin, and others for their contributions to this month’s checklist.
[Chuck Almdale]

Malibu Census 20213/224/255/226/207/228/22
Temperature60-6158-6359-6863-6966-7468-73
Tide Lo/Hi HeightL+0.86H+4.83L+1.57H+4.89H+4.20H+4.55
 Tide Time122308430736062711481034
1(Black) Brant 1    
1Canada Goose68610  
1Cinnamon Teal7     
1Northern Shoveler8     
1Gadwall162518654812
1American Wigeon8     
1Mallard16182240379
1Green-winged Teal25     
1Surf Scoter2     
1Red-breasted Merganser123 111
1Ruddy Duck     2
2Pied-billed Grebe611 21
2Eared Grebe2     
2Western Grebe114    
7Feral Pigeon69159156
7Mourning Dove6  243
8Anna’s Hummingbird311111
8Allen’s Hummingbird2421 3
2American Coot235756982
5Black Oystercatcher4     
5Black-bellied Plover31225134390
5Snowy Plover23   929
5Semipalmated Plover 29  14
5Killdeer7164920
5Whimbrel631995117
5Marbled Godwit10    4
5Ruddy Turnstone5  228
5Red-necked Stint     1
5Sanderling160    12
5Dunlin 1              2
5Baird’s Sandpiper     5
5Least Sandpiper81  835
5Western Sandpiper420  1265
5Short-billed Dowitcher     3
5Spotted Sandpiper 1   2
5Willet621  40
5Red-necked Phalarope    14
6Heermann’s Gull4228280 21
6Ring-billed Gull126    
6Western Gull654035455255
6California Gull1303510414
6Herring Gull1     
6Glaucous-winged Gull111  1
6Least Tern     1
6Caspian Tern420133 2
6Royal Tern246 25 
6Elegant Tern 39510712401
2Double-crested Cormorant251226265227
2Pelagic Cormorant 1   1
2Brown Pelican27105235275830
3Great Blue Heron  3254
3Great Egret2114114
3Snowy Egret32162224
3Green Heron  1   
3Black-crowned Night-Heron    93
4Turkey Vulture1 1   
4Osprey221   
4Cooper’s Hawk    11
4Red-shouldered Hawk  2  1
8Belted Kingfisher     1
4Peregrine Falcon 1    
9Black Phoebe286 34
9Western Kingbird  1   
9California Scrub-Jay2   11
9American Crow544344
9Common Raven1     
9Violet-green Swallow  2   
9Rough-winged Swallow623  2
9Cliff Swallow  84 4
9Barn Swallow102530184025
9Oak Titmouse  2 12
9Bushtit20184120
9Wrentit     1
9Western Bluebird2     
9Northern Mockingbird245211
9European Starling755 8 30
9House Finch10666618
9Lesser Goldfinch162   2
9Spotted Towhee 1   1
9California Towhee4 3  1
9Song Sparrow778453
9White-crowned Sparrow62    
9Hooded Oriole 11   
9Red-winged Blackbird224 25 
9Brown-headed Cowbird21 1  
9Great-tailed Grackle8668205
9Common Yellowthroat3  4 2
9Yellow Warbler  2   
9Yellow-rumped Warbler151    
Totals by TypeMarAprMayJunJulAug
1Waterfowl10055461168624
2Water Birds – Other3061982686212061
3Herons, Egrets & Ibis536124735
4Quail & Raptors334012
5Shorebirds264803128136341
6Gulls & Terns2795314465530065
7Doves1291511199
8Other Non-Passerines553215
9Passerines198789962107126
 Totals Birds1172962918348817668
        
 Total SpeciesMarAprMayJunJulAug
1Waterfowl953434
2Water Birds – Other664345
3Herons, Egrets & Ibis224344
4Quail & Raptors223012
5Shorebirds11944917
6Gulls & Terns886557
7Doves211222
8Other Non-Passerines222213
9Passerines201717111118
Totals Species – 89625244344062

Elegant Terns at Malibu Lagoon, 25 April 2021

[Posted by Chuck Almdale]

Mallard female touchdown (Ray Juncosa 4-25-21)

As with March, this was a Sunday morning affair, rather than mid-week. Although the surfers were out in force, cool temperatures for April kept sun-worshippers off the sand. Eleven masked and vaguely distanced birders appeared.

Over the lagoon and out to sea (Lillian Johnson 4-25-21)

The Canada Geese have definitely found the lagoon a friendly place to nest. At least three pairs nest on the southeastern brushy sand island; perhaps the fourth pair as well. This island has lots of brush and is the farthest from solid land. When the geese crouch lie low, they’re hidden from people on the path. From an Osprey-eye’s view, overhead, they’re obvious, but fortunately for them Osprey aren’t interested in geese.

One of the four pair of Canada Geese nesting at the lagoon. (Chris Tosdevin 4-25-21)

The noisy and busy Northern Mockingbirds were easily seen. This one’s face was probably dusted by pollen. (C. Tosdevin 4-25-21)

Our lone Brant (C. Tosdevin, 4-25-21)

Ducks are leaving for the north. Our March 22 trip counted 9 species and 100 birds, now down to 5 species and 55 birds. Coots also dropped from 235 to 75 birds, but gulls and terns rose 252 birds in 8 species to 531 birds, also in 8 species. Most of those are the 395 recently-arrived Elegant Terns, back from wintering in Mexico. Migrant passerines were almost totally absent, with a lone male Hooded Oriole the sole representative. One or more pairs of Hooded Oriole have nested in the palms and other trees around the lagoon and Adamson House for the past 15 years, excepting 2007.

Brant geese are regular visitors at the lagoon. Recorded them 45 times since 1979 and average 3 birds per visit, they’ve appeared in all months, are least common in Oct-Jan and most common in May.

A recently wave-washed wide and low beach, looking west towards the lagoon and colony
(L. Johnson 4-25-21)

Check the toe-joints on the Least Sandpiper, left (R. Juncosa 4-25-21)
Western Sandpiper (C. Tosdevin 4-25-21)
Both birds well on their way into alternate plumage.

The high tide of +4.83 ft. at 8:43am kept most of the rocks well-covered, so no Black or otherwise Oystercatchers were seen, unlike the previous four months.

Male Anna’s Hummingbird, either coming or going (R. Juncosa 4-25-21)

Semipalmated Plovers regularly appear in April on their northward journey back to the Arctic. The only years we’ve missed them in April is when we weren’t there, as during the 2020 pandemic. Our 29 birds this time is bested only by 35 birds on 4-23-06.

Semipalmated Plover, regular in April. It’s hard to see those semipalmated toes. (C. Tosdevin 4-25-21)

We don’t get many Dunlin at the lagoon, I’d guess it has something to do with the vertebrate selection around the lagoon. Whatever the cause, for 1979-2021 I’ve recorded them only 27 times, for a total of 51 birds. 35 of those birds were fall migrants in Sep-Oct, 7 were spring migrants in April, and the remaining 9 birds were scattered over 4 months, 2 in May-Jun and 7 in Nov-Dec. This year’s bird is well on its way into alternate (breeding) plumage.

Our sole Dunlin (C. Tosdevin 4-25-21)

The Snowy Plovers are gone. Grace & Larry reported 20 on 3-20-21, we had 23 on the following day, but on 4-12-21 G&L had none. The beach is very wide, but very low. Even ordinary high tides can send waves almost all the way across and into the lagoon.

Left: Elegant Tern with thin decurved bill (C. Tosdevin 4-25-21)
Right: Caspian Tern with stout straight crimson bill (R. Juncosa 4-25-21)

The outlet channel was right up to the rip-rap protecting the Adamson House fence. We clambered over the rocks and explored the property. Most birds were more of the same – hummingbirds, Song Sparrows, Black Phoebes, but Chris found a beautiful brightly-plumaged male Hooded Oriole in a tree. A few minutes later we spotted the Dunlin back on the beach and Chris made his way back to the beach to get the photo above.

Male Hooded Oriole (C. Tosdevin 4-25-21)

Birds new for the season: Brant, Semipalmated Plover, Dunlin, Elegant Tern, Peregrine Falcon, Spotted Towhee, Hooded Oriole.

Many thanks to photographers: Lillian Johnson, Ray Juncosa, and Chris Tosdevin

When Snowy Egrets aren’t wading, you can see their yellow feet.
(R. Juncosa 4-25-21)

Squabbling (?) House Finch pair (R. Juncosa 4-25-21)

Barn Swallow on rain bird
(C. Tosdevin 4-25-21)

Links: Unusual birds at Malibu Lagoon
9/23/02 Aerial photo of Malibu Lagoon

Prior checklists:
2020: Jan-JulyJuly-Dec  2019: Jan-June, July-Dec  

2018: Jan-June, July-Dec  2017: Jan-June, July-Dec
2016: Jan-June, July-Dec  2015: Jan-May, July-Dec
2014: Jan-July,  July-Dec  2013: Jan-June, July-Dec
2012: Jan-June, July -Dec 2011: Jan-June, July-Dec
2010: Jan-June, July-Dec  2009: Jan-June, July-Dec.

The 10-year comparison summaries created during the Lagoon Reconfiguration Project period, despite numerous complaints, remain available on our Lagoon Project Bird Census Page. Very briefly summarized, the results unexpectedly indicate that avian species diversification and numbers improved slightly during the restoration period June’12-June’14.
[Chuck Almdale]

Malibu Census 2020-2111/2312/221/222/223/224/25
Temperature52-6457-6460-6165-7460-6158-63
Tide Lo/Hi HeightL+2.17L+2.15L+0.86L-0.13L+0.86H+4.83
Tide Time113510521223131412230843
Snow Goose 2    
(Black) Brant1    1
Canada Goose  8868
Cinnamon Teal   47 
Northern Shoveler    8 
Gadwall2868121625
American Wigeon30268128 
Mallard 148101618
Northern Pintail 122  
Green-winged Teal12861125 
Surf Scoter 13 152 
Bufflehead10564  
Red-breasted Merganser912112123
Ruddy Duck3519625  
Pied-billed Grebe332661
Eared Grebe15 12 
Western Grebe62 4114
Rock Pigeon9143469
Mourning Dove92 16 
Anna’s Hummingbird 2 231
Allen’s Hummingbird22 224
Sora 1    
American Coot28744511021023575
Black Oystercatcher 4244 
Black-bellied Plover301025253122
Snowy Plover28222127230
Semipalmated Plover 41  29
Killdeer81420471
Whimbrel588363
Marbled Godwit48101110 
Ruddy Turnstone261 5 
Sanderling7825850160 
Dunlin     1
Least Sandpiper4136481
Western Sandpiper   1420
Spotted Sandpiper22 1 1
Willet1410121162
Greater Yellowlegs 1    
Heermann’s Gull85431624228
Mew Gull2     
Ring-billed Gull10651538126
Western Gull533430806540
California Gull5354855023513035
Herring Gull11  1 
Glaucous-winged Gull133111
Caspian Tern    420
Forster’s Tern1     
Royal Tern 356246
Elegant Tern     395
Pacific Loon11 1  
Brandt’s Cormorant1  5  
Double-crested Cormorant1082885522512
Pelagic Cormorant41 1 1
Brown Pelican206321621227105
Great Blue Heron3313  
Great Egret 12221
Snowy Egret42310932
Black-crowned Night-Heron   1  
Turkey Vulture221 1 
Osprey111 22
Cooper’s Hawk1 1   
Red-tailed Hawk1     
Belted Kingfisher111   
Nuttall’s Woodpecker  1   
Downy Woodpecker 1    
Peregrine Falcon     1
Black Phoebe461228
Say’s Phoebe251   
California Scrub-Jay   12 
American Crow11146254
Common Raven    1 
Tree Swallow3     
Rough-winged Swallow    62
Barn Swallow    1025
Bushtit 30308201
House Wren1     
Marsh Wren3     
Bewick’s Wren2     
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher2     
Ruby-crowned Kinglet2     
Western Bluebird    2 
Northern Mockingbird 1  24
European Starling853010 755
House Finch4644106
Lesser Goldfinch2564162
Spotted Towhee     1
California Towhee1  14 
Song Sparrow1233477
White-crowned Sparrow12 4562
Dark-eyed Junco 1    
Hooded Oriole     1
Red-winged Blackbird    22
Brown-headed Cowbird    21
Great-tailed Grackle83 186
Orange-crowned Warbler 1    
Common Yellowthroat851 3 
Yellow-rumped(Aud) Warbler816614151
Totals by TypeNovDecJanFebMarApr
Waterfowl1251065311510055
Water Birds – Other617518359292306198
Herons, Egrets & Ibis727131553
Quail & Raptors533033
Shorebirds17512711414126480
Gulls & Terns688634119362279531
Doves181635129
Other Non-Passerines362455
Passerines170126724619878
Totals Birds180815637389801172962
       
Total SpeciesNovDecJanFebMarApr
Waterfowl71091195
Water Birds – Other994966
Herons, Egrets & Ibis233422
Quail & Raptors423022
Shorebirds101311111110
Gulls & Terns876688
Doves221221
Other Non-Passerines242222
Passerines181411112017
Totals Species – 97626450566253

1st Sunday of Spring, Malibu Lagoon, 21 March 2021

[Posted by Chuck Almdale]

Double-crested Cormorant (Ray Juncosa 3-21-21)

After doing our non-official, nearly-impromptu lagoon census-walk on weekdays for the past ten months, primarily to avoid maskless crowds, I decided to try one on the weekend. People in Los Angeles are seeing a (perhaps illusory) light at the end of the Covid tunnel, vaccines are being injected, the maskless are again on the loose, and the weekday morning roads and highways are refilling with drivers. So Sunday morning it was to be.

Mudflat, rocks with cormorants, lagoon, Surfrider Beach, Pacific Ocean and Santa Monica in the distance (Lillian Johnson 3-21-21)

Male Yellowthroat (Chris Tosdevin 3-21-21)

Good weather, a lowering tide, acceptably cool and not as breezy as predicted all made for a good day. Some who worked or are otherwise occupied during the week were able to come, and we had thirteen birders, all masked and ready to go. That’s the most we’ve had since February 2020, and it’s about the limit of social-distancing birders the narrower paths can handle. In my opinion.

Reed beds were flattened from the rain and hail earlier in the month, leaving nowhere for Soras and Virginia Rails to hide, if there were any, which there aren’t. An Osprey – absent last month – alit upon a pipe protruding from the north channel mud. It soon began chirp-calling in its odd, un-raptorlike manner, and within a few minutes another Osprey approached from the south and dropped out of the sky. After circling the calling bird it headed off towards the shopping center to the north. Territorial display? Courting? Saying hi? Kemosabe?

Osprey calling; none of the photos of this bird showed any more of a right leg than this (R. Juncosa 3-21-21)

The two Western Bluebirds flitted about in the trees over the port-a-potties, which seems to be their favorite spot. We’ve seen them there in the past, scarfing Sugarbush berries. It’s leafy and they can perch high to spot snacks (aka insects) flying by. Perhaps they drop down to the grassy private golf course a few feet away, invisible to us on the other side of a high brick wall.

Western Bluebird male (Femi Faminu 3-21-21)

Nine species of ducks and geese rested on the exposed mud or dabbled in the water. Last month’s Pintails, Buffleheads and Ruddy Ducks were absent, but Northern Shovelers were there. Relatively abundant were the 25 Green-winged Teal, most of them lying on the muddy shore of a sand island. Pied-billed Grebes dove in the deeper water by the PCH bridge, accompanied by many coots and several Red-breasted Mergansers.

Northern Shovelers have a very large bill for a duck (C. Tosdevin 3-21-21)

The mockingbirds were back in place – after their two-month absence (perhaps they went to Cancun?) – near the telephone at the colony west end corner. Although neither sang from the top of their rightful pole, there was plenty of chasing around and singing from the lower bushes and small trees.

Allen’s Hummingbird male 3-21-21 Left: R. Juncosa — Right: C. Tosdevin

The oft-referred-to “outer rocks” are at upper left, perhaps 100 meters offshore (L. Johnson 3-21-21)

While checking the higher offshore rocks in front of Malibu Colony’s west end, we found a large number of shorebirds among the low exposed rocks (we were well on our way towards 11:53am low tide of +0.74 ft.). They turned out to be mostly Sanderlings, 160 of them, with some larger Whimbrels, Willets and Marbled Godwits mixed in.

Thirty-three or so of the Sanderlings (C. Tosdevin 3-21-21)

A single Brown Pelican sat on the outer rocks, alone, probably because the waves were still making the seaward side of the rocks unusable. But a closer look revealed a Black Oystercatcher standing atop one rock. Searching more carefully, we found three more Black Oystercatchers, blending in very well with the dark wet rocks. Photographs were taken, of course. One obliging bird saw us staring at him and flew to a nearby rock to give us a better look, or maybe take a better look at us, or perhaps something else entirely.

Black Oystercatcher glides in (C. Tosdevin 3-21-21)

Black Oystercatcher (C. Tosdevin 3-21-21)

As we walked eastward towards the other exposed rocky reefs, two of the oystercatchers flew by and dropped into those dark damp rocks near the gulls and terns, and began exploring the newly-exposed crevices and gravel.

Beach wrack, exposed rocks and Santa Monica in far distance (L. Johnson 3-21-21)

Jean and Liz had already explored the beach and informed us they didn’t see any Snowy Plovers. So we needed to do a close investigation of all the little pockmark holes across the now-broad beach, widened by the lowering tide and the near-empty lagoon. To our surprise we found them fairly close to the beachblanketed sunbathers perched on the beach berm, widely scattered, in small groups of two to eight birds, totaling 23 birds, including winter resident gg:yg.

Western Snowy Plovers gets quite colorful in the spring (Grace Murayama 3-20-21)

The ~250 gulls included six species: 130 California, 65 Westerns, 42 Heermann’s, a dozen Ring-bills and one each of Herring and Glaucous-winged. The 28 terns were 4 Caspian and 24 Royal. Elegant Terns and the other smaller terns will probably show up next month. Ruddy Turnstones and Black-bellied Plovers roamed and rested on the rocks among the gulls.

Marbled Godwit, almost fully extended (R. Juncosa 3-21-21)

I forded the outlet stream – about 6 inches deep and warmer than last month’s ice water – and went on to Adamson House. Crossing over Surfrider beach, swarming with surfers and surfer-watchers, I noticed two Eared Grebes diving under Malibu Pier, darkening into breeding plumage.

A small example of Giant Coriopsis, coming into bloom, endemic to local shoreline and nearby channel islands (G. Murayama 3-20-21)

Male Lesser Goldfinch (C. Tosdevin 3-21-21)

Local birder Tom Miko, one who certainly gets around the L.A. area a lot, had reported a weird woodpecker there the day before, seemingly a blend of Nuttall’s and Downy, but with a black face. I searched the grounds high and low, but found little other than a large flock of European Starlings. There weren’t even any hummingbirds in the flowering hedges! However, I was quite pleased to see that the boathouse rooftop viewing platform has been completely repaired, finally! (it’s been years), and open for use. Unfortunately, lagoon water level was so low that the pool below the boathouse was bone dry, with not a bird to see. C’est La Vie.

Birds new for the season: Northern Shoveler, Herring Gull, Caspian Tern, Common Raven, Rough-winged Swallow, Barn Swallow, Western Bluebird, Northern Mockingbird, Red-winged Blackbird, Brown-headed Cowbird.

Many thanks to photographers: Femi Faminu, Lillian Johnson, Ray Juncosa, Grace Murayama and Chris Tosdevin

Turkey Vulture (C. Tosdevin 3-21-21)

Links: Unusual birds at Malibu Lagoon
9/23/02 Aerial photo of Malibu Lagoon

Prior checklists:
2020: Jan-JulyJuly-Dec  2019: Jan-June, July-Dec  

2018: Jan-June, July-Dec  2017: Jan-June, July-Dec
2016: Jan-June, July-Dec  2015: Jan-May, July-Dec
2014: Jan-July,  July-Dec  2013: Jan-June, July-Dec
2012: Jan-June, July -Dec 2011: Jan-June, July-Dec
2010: Jan-June, July-Dec  2009: Jan-June, July-Dec.

The 10-year comparison summaries created during the Lagoon Reconfiguration Project period, despite numerous complaints, remain available on our Lagoon Project Bird Census Page. Very briefly summarized, the results unexpectedly indicate that avian species diversification and numbers improved slightly during the restoration period June’12-June’14.
[Chuck Almdale]

Malibu Census 2020-2110/2111/2312/221/222/223/22
Temperature64-6852-6457-6460-6165-7460-61
Tide Lo/Hi HeightL+2.70L+2.17L+2.15L+0.86L-0.13L+0.86
Tide Time063411351052122313141223
Snow Goose  2   
(Black) Brant 1    
Canada Goose   886
Cinnamon Teal    47
Northern Shoveler     8
Gadwall228681216
American Wigeon330268128
Mallard  1481016
Northern Pintail  122 
Green-winged Teal 12861125
Surf Scoter3 13 152
Bufflehead 10564 
Red-breasted Merganser 91211212
Ruddy Duck93519625 
Pied-billed Grebe233266
Eared Grebe115 12
Western Grebe 62 411
Rock Pigeon10914346
Mourning Dove292 16
Anna’s Hummingbird1 2 23
Allen’s Hummingbird122 22
Sora  1   
American Coot118287445110210235
Black Oystercatcher  4244
Black-bellied Plover913010252531
Snowy Plover422822212723
Semipalmated Plover  41  
Killdeer18142047
Whimbrel358836
Marbled Godwit548101110
Ruddy Turnstone6261 5
Sanderling757825850160
Least Sandpiper 413648
Western Sandpiper    14
Spotted Sandpiper122 1 
Willet5141012116
Greater Yellowlegs  1   
Heermann’s Gull 854316242
Mew Gull 2    
Ring-billed Gull 1065153812
Western Gull215334308065
California Gull153548550235130
Herring Gull 11  1
Glaucous-winged Gull 13311
Caspian Tern     4
Forster’s Tern 1    
Royal Tern  35624
Red-throated Loon1     
Pacific Loon 11 1 
Brandt’s Cormorant 1  5 
Double-crested Cormorant1610828855225
Pelagic Cormorant341 1 
Brown Pelican5206321621227
Great Blue Heron33313 
Great Egret1 1222
Snowy Egret54231093
Black-crowned Night-Heron    1 
Turkey Vulture 221 1
Osprey1111 2
Cooper’s Hawk 1 1  
Red-tailed Hawk 1    
Belted Kingfisher 111  
Nuttall’s Woodpecker   1  
Downy Woodpecker  1   
Black Phoebe546122
Say’s Phoebe2251  
Vermilion Flycatcher1     
California Scrub-Jay    12
American Crow41114625
Common Raven     1
Tree Swallow 3    
Rough-winged Swallow     6
Barn Swallow     10
Bushtit75 3030820
House Wren21    
Marsh Wren 3    
Bewick’s Wren 2    
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher22    
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 2    
Western Bluebird     2
Northern Mockingbird2 1  2
European Starling5853010 75
House Finch4464410
Lesser Goldfinch2256416
California Towhee11  14
Song Sparrow7123347
White-crowned Sparrow412 456
Dark-eyed Junco  1   
Red-winged Blackbird     2
Brown-headed Cowbird     2
Great-tailed Grackle283 18
Orange-crowned Warbler2 1   
Common Yellowthroat5851 3
Yellow-rumped(Aud) Warbler1081661415
Totals by TypeOctNovDecJanFebMar
Waterfowl1712510653115100
Water Birds – Other146617518359292306
Herons, Egrets & Ibis972713155
Quail & Raptors153303
Shorebirds229175127114141264
Gulls & Terns22688634119362279
Doves1218163512
Other Non-Passerines236245
Passerines1351701267246198
Totals Birds573180815637389801172
       
Total SpeciesOctNovDecJanFebMar
Waterfowl47109119
Water Birds – Other799496
Herons, Egrets & Ibis323342
Quail & Raptors142302
Shorebirds91013111111
Gulls & Terns287668
Doves222122
Other Non-Passerines224222
Passerines181814111120
Totals Species – 94486264505662

Oystercatchers at Malibu Lagoon, 22 February 2021

[Posted by Chuck Almdale]

View south towards Malibu Colony and picnic area (L. Johnson 2-22-21)

The weather really was perfect. The temperature started at 65°F at 9am, rising to 74°F by 11:30. A slight breeze rose as the day warmed, keeping it very pleasant. We never needed to add or shed clothing. While descending Malibu Canyon Road we saw a light brown haze stretching south from Santa Monica over the bay, but at sea level we couldn’t see it, and the sky was a cloudless pristine blue.

Low tide and high water at Malibu Lagoon (L – L. Johnson 2-22-21, R – G. Murayama 7-31-20)

Very few, if any, surfers graced the water. Tide was very low, heading lower to -0.13 ft. at 1:14pm. A high-pressure zone in the desert was blowing from land to sea, hence the smog layer. When there’s little swell, such winds flatten whatever waves there are. I saw one paddleboarder over by the pier.

Low tide at Malibu — where did all those rocks come from? (Photos L. Johnson 2-22-21)

There were seven birders, all masked – save for one nose – and ready to bird. Bring ‘em on!

Glaucous-winged Gull discovers the joys of watermelon (L – C. Bragg, R – R. Juncosa 2-22-21)

Well…we had a good variety of ducks, a fair number of gulls and good diversity but low counts of shorebirds, but the passerines were conspicuous by their absence. Not even a mockingbird!

An immaculate Brown Pelican ready to breed (Photos L – C. Bragg R – C. Tosdevin 2-22-21)

A Great Egret stayed very close to the picnic area behind Malibu Colony. We speculated whether it could reach into the trash bin (probably couldn’t), then discovered why it was there, when it caught and ate a lizard. (Photos: L – C. Bragg, R – R. Juncosa 2-22-21)


I would not be surprised to find at least two pair of Canada Geese nesting this spring at the lagoon. They seemed to quite like the easternmost sand & brush island – one pair at each end – but last month a pair seemed to be very interested in the area near the “osprey perch” at the western island’s east end. With eight geese honking and fighting, if they pair up there’s plenty of room.

Five of the eight Canada Geese (C. Tosdevin 2-22-21)

By the time we got to the ocean, the tide was really, really out, with perhaps more rocky reefs exposed than I’ve ever seen before. [I have a sneaking hunch that I think this every time the water is really low.] Back home, I checked to see how accurate this memory is. Not bad, as it turned out. During the exactly 200 visits since 6/27/04, there have been only 17 dates with negative tides, the lowest being -1.10 ft on 4/23/13 (on-line table now says -1.06 ft). So…today’s -0.17 ft. was not the lowest, but not far off.

Black Phoebe. Also a birder. (L. Johnson 2-22-21

The high offshore rocks near the Malibu Colony had an assortment of cormorants – five Brandt’s among the Double-crested, plus a sleeping Harbor Seal at the other end, well away from the potentially noisy and annoying birds. Several of the Brandt’s had breeding-blue gular pouches and white cheek plumes. These birds usually leave about the time they develop these features, so we don’t see them every year.

Brandt’s Cormorant with blue gular pouch and white cheek plumes (digiscope photo C. Tosdevin 2-22-21)
Bath time for Black Oystercatchers (R. Juncosa 2-22-21)

The most interesting birds were the oystercatchers – three Black and one not-Black. They were all out on the exposed rocky reefs among the gulls. The three Blacks even left the rocks and ran around on the sand, unusual for Oystercatchers. One even took a bath in the waves with a gull. Quite astonishing!

A frolic in the waves with a Western Gull – how could an oystercatcher pass that up?
(photos: C. Bragg 1/22/21)

I wrote a long blog in March 2020 about the oystercatchers at and around Malibu Lagoon so if you want to know everything I know about them, read it here. It’s a tricky call. “Frazar’s” American Oystercatcher breeds around the Sea of Cortez and on the west coast of Baja, and they look very much like our bird here. Black Oystercatchers also breed on the west coast of Baja and will hybridize with the Frazar’s. They do not hybridize with Frazar’s breeding around the Sea of Cortez. In Southern California we can have four types of Oystercatcher: Black (by far the most common), full American (least common, coming from Gulf of Mexico), Frazar’s (either side of Baja), and hybrid Frazar’s/Black (west coast of Baja).

Hybrid Oystercatcher or American “Frazar’s” Oystercatcher (H.p.frazari) — a close call.
The stance of the right-hand bird reminds me a bit of Mae West. (All 4 photos C. Tosdevin 2-22-21)


A bird rated 30 or higher on the the Jehl Scale is supposed to be an American. I rate this bird overall 28-33 of 42 points. Some criteria are difficult to impossible to clearly see. Upper Tail Coverts – 2-3, Tail – 2, Chest – 3, Belly – 6, Under Tail Coverts – 3-4, Thighs – 4, Greater Secondary Coverts – 2-3, Extent of Primary Wing Stripe – 1-2, Underwing Coverts – 2-3, and Axillars – 3. The Jehl Scale is given at the end of the March 2020 blog, and can be downloaded or printed here.

This bird, in my inexpert opinion, is on the borderline between Hybrid and H.p.frazari. I feel it ought to have a bit more white going up the shoulder between black breast and wing. I also think this is one of the birds in the March 2020 blog, which I couldn’t reach a firm conclusion on. It probably spends most of it’s time along the wet rocky areas within a few miles of Malibu Lagoon, and drops in at Malibu’s Surfrider Beach when the tide is low.

Two Western Snowy Plovers (L – R. Juncosa R – C. Tosdevin 2/22/21)


I waded across the outlet stream, opting for wide and shallow rather than narrow and deep. The water rose halfway up my shins — more where the sand was very soft and I started sinking in. Icy cold! I though my feet had fallen off by the time I got across. The point of crossing was to search all areas for Western Snowy Plovers which we hadn’t seen on our trip down the wide beach. Of course there were none. Back across the stream and westward we walked, finally finding 27 birds in their little sand-pockets, inland of the berm.

Black Phoebe, a bit closer. Tide-wet sand. (L – R. Juncosa R – L. Johnson 2-22-21)


Birds new for the season: Cinnamon Teal, Western Sandpiper, Brandt’s Cormorant, Black-crowned Night-Heron, California Scrub-Jay, California Towhee.

White-crowned Sparrow
(C. Tosdevin 2-22-21)

Many thanks to photographers: Chuck Bragg, Lillian Johnson, Ray Juncosa and Chris Tosdevin

Links: Unusual birds at Malibu Lagoon
9/23/02 Aerial photo of Malibu Lagoon

Prior checklists:
2019: Jan-June, July-Dec  2020: Jan-JulyJuly-Dec   

2018: Jan-June, July-Dec  2017: Jan-June, July-Dec
2016: Jan-June, July-Dec  2015: Jan-May, July-Dec
2014: Jan-July,  July-Dec  2013: Jan-June, July-Dec
2012: Jan-June, July -Dec 2011: Jan-June, July-Dec
2010: Jan-June, July-Dec  2009: Jan-June, July-Dec.

The 10-year comparison summaries created during the Lagoon Reconfiguration Project period, despite numerous complaints, remain available on our Lagoon Project Bird Census Page. Very briefly summarized, the results unexpectedly indicate that avian species diversification and numbers improved slightly during the restoration period June’12-June’14.
[Chuck Almdale]

Malibu Census 2020-219/2410/2111/2312/221/222/22
Temperature 66-7764-6852-6457-6460-6165-74
Tide Lo/Hi HeightL+3.05L+2.70L+2.17L+2.15L+0.86L-0.13
Tide Time100406341135105212231314
Snow Goose   2  
(Black) Brant  1   
Canada Goose    88
Cinnamon Teal     4
Gadwall22286812
American Wigeon 33026812
Mallard14  14810
Northern Pintail2  122
Green-winged Teal  128611
Surf Scoter 3 13 15
Bufflehead  10564
Red-breasted Merganser  912112
Ruddy Duck 93519625
Pied-billed Grebe223326
Eared Grebe 115 1
Western Grebe  62 4
Rock Pigeon61091434
Mourning Dove4292 1
Vaux’s Swift8     
Anna’s Hummingbird 1 2 2
Allen’s Hummingbird1122 2
Sora   1  
American Coot48118287445110210
Black Oystercatcher   424
Black-bellied Plover1029130102525
Snowy Plover274228222127
Semipalmated Plover8  41 
Killdeer121814204
Whimbrel135883
Marbled Godwit35481011
Ruddy Turnstone16261 
Sanderling39757825850
Least Sandpiper12 41364
Western Sandpiper1    1
Spotted Sandpiper2122 1
Willet40514101211
Greater Yellowlegs   1  
Heermann’s Gull14 8543162
Mew Gull  2   
Ring-billed Gull  10651538
Western Gull902153343080
California Gull12153548550235
Herring Gull  11  
Glaucous-winged Gull  1331
Forster’s Tern  1   
Royal Tern12  356
Elegant Tern1     
Red-throated Loon 1    
Pacific Loon  11 1
Brandt’s Cormorant  1  5
Double-crested Cormorant4316108288552
Pelagic Cormorant1341 1
Brown Pelican552063216212
Great Blue Heron333313
Great Egret201 122
Snowy Egret25423109
Black-crowned Night-Heron     1
Turkey Vulture  221 
Osprey 1111 
Cooper’s Hawk  1 1 
Red-tailed Hawk  1   
Belted Kingfisher2 111 
Nuttall’s Woodpecker    1 
Downy Woodpecker   1  
Black Phoebe454612
Say’s Phoebe12251 
Vermilion Flycatcher 1    
Loggerhead Shrike1     
California Scrub-Jay2    1
American Crow34111462
Tree Swallow  3   
Bushtit1675 30308
House Wren 21   
Marsh Wren5 3   
Bewick’s Wren  2   
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher522   
Ruby-crowned Kinglet  2   
Wrentit1     
Northern Mockingbird 2 1  
European Starling25853010 
House Finch844644
Lesser Goldfinch222564
Lawrence’s Goldfinch15     
California Towhee111  1
Song Sparrow3712334
White-crowned Sparrow 412 45
Dark-eyed Junco   1  
Great-tailed Grackle 283 1
Orange-crowned Warbler42 1  
Common Yellowthroat45851 
Yellow Warbler2     
Yellow-rumped(Aud) Warbler 10816614
Totals by TypeSepOctNovDecJanFeb
Waterfowl181712510653115
Water Birds – Other99146617518359292
Herons, Egrets & Ibis2597271315
Quail & Raptors015330
Shorebirds248229175127114141
Gulls & Terns12922688634119362
Doves1012181635
Other Non-Passerines1123624
Passerines791351701267246
Totals Birds61957318081563738980
       
Total SpeciesSepOctNovDecJanFeb
Waterfowl34710911
Water Birds – Other579949
Herons, Egrets & Ibis332334
Quail & Raptors014230
Shorebirds12910131111
Gulls & Terns528766
Doves222212
Other Non-Passerines322422
Passerines181818141111
Totals Species – 92514862645056

A quiet pre-Christmas: Malibu Lagoon, 22 December 2020

[Posted by Chuck Almdale]

Northern Mockingbird (Chris Tosdevin 12/22/20)

For no good reason I know of, the Mockingbirds have been hard to find at the lagoon the past few months. For Jan’10 – Aug’20, they were present 90% of the time (114 out of 127 visits). For Sep – Dec’20, they’ve been missing two out of four months. There’s nearly always one on the top of the telephone pole at the east end of the colony, often singing away. If you see a bird up there and it’s not a crow, it’s probably the mocker. Say hi.

View to south from the meeting place. The Mockingbird phone pole is at the left end of the houses. (Lillian Johnson 12/22/20)

The breech had opened up during the Dec 13-15 king tide, and the lagoon was mostly empty. Despite that, there was a good selection of ducks ( and one Snow Goose) and a heckova* lot of coots – I counted (roughly) exactly 445.
*Heckova: An obscure and now archaic mathematical term meaning “more than many.”

Snow Goose (C. Tosdevin 12/22/20)

Only five of us made it to the lagoon today. Everyone is feeling quite wary of being out and about as Covid-19 is resurging after people enjoyed Thanksgiving with wild abandon. According to the various Covid-19 statistical sites I follow, we had the following Covid-19 new cases and deaths for 22 December: Los Angeles County: 16,412 new cases, 137 deaths; California: 39,069 new cases, 361 deaths; U.S. A.: 195,860 new cases, 3,165 deaths, World (rounded): 650,000 new cases, 20,000 deaths. I hope everyone enjoyed Thanksgiving. The rates have risen since then.

A very attractive male Green-winged Teal (C. Tosdevin 12/22/20)

We don’t get many Dark-eyed Juncos at the lagoon as they generally prefer trees and park lawns where they can find insects, and we’ve had only 8 birds over forty years, all within the past three years. This one was on the back wall of the Malibu Colony.

A wind-ruffled Dark-eyed Junco (Larry Loeher 12/15/20)
View across the channel towards the back of Malibu Colony (L. Johnson 12/22/20)

When we got down to the beach, the tide was getting towards its 10:52 AM low point. Chris got a photo of a line of Surf Scoters heading west.

Surf Scoters (C. Tosdevin 12/22/20)

The low tide had exposed many offshore rocks where all of the pelicans and most of the cormorants and gulls were resting. We also found three of the rock-loving Black Oystercatchers. Two of them are pictured below.

Two Black Oystercatchers next to the Brown Pelicans (C. Tosdevin 12/22/20)

Although the tide was quite low, water was still flowing out of the water. It was very cold, as I discovered when I waded across to find the roosting flock of Snowy Plovers, who prefer the southeast corner of the lagoon.

The S-bend you see above is absolutely typical for the lagoon. When rainstorms send a lot of water down the creek, it blows straight through the beach. But because of the eastward flow of the long-shore current, the outlet mouth begins moving east almost immediately. Over the course of 2 – 4 months, the entire outlet will move to the east, as if the outlet “body” was being dragged by the mouth. By springtime, the outlet is usually as far east as it can go and abuts the Adamson House property so closely that it often undermines the fence. Large rocks in a “rip-rap” wall keep it from moving any farther towards the house.

I did manage to find 22 Snowy Plovers on the other side, some resting in their little pockets in the sand, some poking around by the lagoon edge.

Western Snowy Plover (L. Loeher 12/31/20)

We saw the Red-tailed Hawk soaring overhead, but we certainly didn’t see it as well as did Larry and Grace on 12/31/20.

Red-tailed Hawk (L. Loeher 12/31/20)

All together, we had eight species of sandpipers, including a group of 13 Least Sandpipers such as this one below.

Least Sandpiper (Grace Murayama 12/31/20)

Birds new for the season: Snow Goose, Mallard, Northern Pintail, Sora, Black Oystercatcher, Semipalmated Plover, Greater Yellowlegs, Royal Tern, Downy Woodpecker, Dark-eyed Junco.

Many thanks to photographers: Lillian Johnson, Larry Loeher, Grace Murayama and Chris Tosdevin

The next three SMBAS scheduled field trips: Who knows? Not I.
The next SMBAS program: February 2, Mono Lake: A simple ecosystem with a complex history; with Nora Livingston, on ZOOM, 7:30 PM.
The SMBAS 10 a.m. Parent’s & Kids Birdwalk is canceled until further notice due to the near-impossibility of maintained proper masked social distancing with parents and small children.

Links: Unusual birds at Malibu Lagoon
9/23/02 Aerial photo of Malibu Lagoon

Prior checklists:
2019: Jan-June, July-Dec 
2020: Jan-July,    
2018: Jan-June, July-Dec  2017: Jan-June, July-Dec
2016: Jan-June, July-Dec
  2015: Jan-May, July-Dec
2014: Jan-July,  July-Dec 
2013: Jan-June, July-Dec
2012: Jan-June, July -Dec
2011: Jan-June, July-Dec
2010: Jan-June, July-Dec  2009: Jan-June, July-Dec.

The 10-year comparison summaries created during the Lagoon Reconfiguration Project period, despite numerous complaints, remain available on our Lagoon Project Bird Census Page. Very briefly summarized, the results unexpectedly indicate that avian species diversification and numbers improved slightly during the restoration period June’12-June’14.
[Chuck Almdale]

Malibu Census 20207/228/269/2410/2111/2312/22
Temperature60-6670-7766-7764-6852-6457-64
Tide Lo/Hi HeightL+0.71L+2.52L+3.05L+2.70L+2.17L+2.15
Tide Time081909581004063411351052
Snow Goose     2
(Black) Brant    1 
Canada Goose8     
Gadwall40522286
American Wigeon   33026
Mallard271614  14
Northern Pintail  2  1
Green-winged Teal 1  128
Surf Scoter   3 13
Bufflehead    105
Red-breasted Merganser    912
Ruddy Duck   93519
Pied-billed Grebe332233
Eared Grebe   115
Western Grebe    62
Rock Pigeon104610914
Mourning Dove354292
Vaux’s Swift  8   
Anna’s Hummingbird1  1 2
Allen’s Hummingbird3 1122
Sora     1
American Coot2 48118287445
Black Oystercatcher     4
Black-bellied Plover1566102913010
Snowy Plover82627422822
Semipalmated Plover 48  4
Killdeer27121814
Whimbrel15141358
Marbled Godwit  3548
Ruddy Turnstone221626
Sanderling  39757825
Least Sandpiper22112 413
Western Sandpiper181   
Short-billed Dowitcher 2    
Long-billed Dowitcher4     
Spotted Sandpiper  2122
Wandering Tattler1     
Willet8474051410
Greater Yellowlegs     1
Heermann’s Gull651014 8543
Mew Gull    2 
Ring-billed Gull    1065
Western Gull909890215334
California Gull417121535485
Herring Gull    11
Glaucous-winged Gull    13
Least Tern 2    
Caspian Tern41    
Forster’s Tern 4  1 
Royal Tern 1112  3
Elegant Tern1952211   
Red-throated Loon   1  
Pacific Loon    11
Brandt’s Cormorant    1 
Double-crested Cormorant1618431610828
Pelagic Cormorant 11341
Brown Pelican1985520632
Great Blue Heron243333
Great Egret34201 1
Snowy Egret8425423
Black-crowned Night-Heron 2    
Turkey Vulture    2
Osprey 1 111
Cooper’s Hawk    1 
Red-tailed Hawk    1 
Belted Kingfisher 12 11
Downy Woodpecker     1
Black Phoebe554546
Say’s Phoebe  1225
Vermilion Flycatcher   1  
Loggerhead Shrike  1   
California Scrub-Jay112   
American Crow43341114
Tree Swallow    3 
Rough-winged Swallow 1    
Barn Swallow2220    
Bushtit16501675 30
House Wren 1 21 
Marsh Wren  5 3 
Bewick’s Wren    2 
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher  522 
Ruby-crowned Kinglet    2 
Wrentit1 1   
Western Bluebird 4    
Northern Mockingbird21 2 1
European Starling1227258530
House Finch548446
Lesser Goldfinch  2225
Lawrence’s Goldfinch  15   
California Towhee  111 
Song Sparrow3437123
White-crowned Sparrow   412 
Dark-eyed Junco     1
Western Meadowlark 25    
Hooded Oriole7     
Red-winged Blackbird1     
Great-tailed Grackle202 283
Orange-crowned Warbler  42 1
Common Yellowthroat 44585
Yellow Warbler  2   
Yellow-rumped(Aud) Warbler   10816
Totals by TypeJulAugSepOctNovDec
Waterfowl75221817125106
Water Birds – Other403099146617518
Herons, Egrets & Ibis1314259727
Quail & Raptors010153
Shorebirds58197248229175127
Gulls & Terns35836412922688634
Doves13910121816
Other Non-Passerines4111236
Passerines9915279135170126
Totals Birds66079061957318081563
       
Total SpeciesJulAugSepOctNovDec
Waterfowl3334710
Water Birds – Other445799
Herons, Egrets & Ibis343323
Quail & Raptors010142
Shorebirds10101291013
Gulls & Terns585287
Doves222222
Other Non-Passerines213224
Passerines131518181814
Totals Species – 101424851486264

Ducks returning to Malibu Lagoon: 23 November, 2020

Small, controlled field trips in open spaces still seem feasible.
We had five people this time. And we stopped by Legacy Park.

[By Chuck Almdale]

Brant is a regular visitor in very small numbers (Ray Juncosa 11-23-20)

We had five masked and equidistant birders this time. Most of the irregulars were busily preparing for Thanksgiving, or simply forgot, but Chris and Ruth Tosdevin joined Lillian, Ray and I on a cool and cloudy day.

View from the meeting place (Lillian Johnson 11-23-20)

Flat, flat, flat waves. The few surfers decking the water sat upon their boards. None attempted to catch a wave. “Maybe they’re working out New Year’s resolutions to surf at least one hour each day of the year,” I mused. What other reasonable reason could there be?

Lifeguard station, barren beach, no surfers and Malibu Pier in distance on a cloudy, foggy day. (L. Johnson 11-23-20)

The duck (plus one goose) population jumped up from October’s 17 birds in 5 species to 125 birds in 7 species. The Brant, Green-winged Teal (fly-bys), Red-breasted Merganser and Bufflehead – both females and bold-patterned males – were new. The coot population more than doubled; everywhere you looked jet-black coots were crusing, fighting, diving.

Say’s Phoebe on a rain bird (R. Juncosa 11-23-20)

On 11-16-20 Grace Murayama caught a different Say’s taking off.

The gull population exploded: October had 22 birds, November had 687; most were California Gull, finally arriving from Mono Lake.

At the time we thought this was a Mew Gull.
Now it’s looks Ring-billed to me. (R. Juncosa 11-23-20)

The lagoon water level was quite high. Every year, starting November 1st, the Tapia Water Reclamation Plant, located a few miles up Malibu Creek, is permitted to channel unsold reclaimed water into the creek. It used to be that they could do this November 1 – May 1, but not during the six hot months. (Does anyone know if they’re still doing this?) This water dumping used to be a significant source of pollution some 20-40 years ago, but Tapia cleaned up their act. Now their water (if they discharge into the creek) is cleaner than that from further upstream, which runs past horse farms, malls hosing down their parking lots, homeless encampments and tens of thousands of suburban homes filled to the brim with people washing their cars and forever fertilizing their endless rolling lawns.

An inundated tidal clock sidewalk measured 6′ 9.6″ water level
(L. Johnson 11-23-20)

Even the cormorant-barely-laden snag was drowning (R. Juncosa 11-23-20)

We had some rain a few weeks ago, well under an inch (about 0.05″ at our house), and that might have added a little something. There’d also been a King Tide on November 15-16, when waves washed right over the beach into the lagoon. All that brought the water level up to about 6′ 9″. Pretty high.

Here’s a look back at a week earlier, King Tide day, 11-16-20.

Not much dry beach left. (Larry Loeher 11-16-20)

This Malibu Colony house looks like it’s falling into the sea, but I think the camera was a little tilted. It’s not that bad off. Normally the bottoms of the leftmost support pilings are not submerged. (Grace Murayama 11-16-20)

While we’re looking at photos from a week earlier, here’s a pair of Redheads, gone by the 23rd. (G. Murayama)

Back to the 23rd. Many rocks exposed by 10:55 am. Low tide was 40 minutes later. It looks cloudy and cold, doesn’t it? (L. Johnson 11-23-20)

A sleepy Sea Lion resting on the exposed shore rocks (R. Juncosa 11-23-20

Of the 10 shorebird species, most (78) were Sanderlings, but there were also 30 Black-bellied Plovers and 28 Snowy Plovers. As the tide was dropping most of the shorebirds were running around looking for prey, including nearly all the Snowy Plovers. This makes it hard to count them, but after about 10 counts, I came up with 28 three times, so that’s my official count.

Not a Snowy Plover, but a close cousin, the Black-bellied Plover. What?, you say, where’s the black belly? Gone, with the breeding plumage of spring and summer. (R. Juncosa 11-23-20)

This Great Blue Heron is looking exceedingly fit & plumy.
(R. Juncosa 11-23-20)

There were a lot of Brown Pelicans, mostly sitting on the low-tide-exposed slightly-offshore rocks. I thought 206 pelicans seemed like a lot – it’s usually less than 90 – so I checked my spreadsheet at home. Not even close; the 15th highest, with 1490 birds on 4-26-15 as the record.

If you look closely at this pelican, the underwing and body feathers seem abbreviated. They look like pinfeathers, but I haven’t seen this effect before so I’m not certain. (R. Juncosa 11-23-20)

It was a good day for raptors: 2 Turkey Vultures, 1 Osprey, 1 Cooper’s Hawk and 1 Red-tailed Hawk. Chris mentioned that he’d heard that White-tailed Kites were declining (again). I think he’s right. We used to see White-tailed Kites at the lagoon, but the last one was on 12-28-14.

This Turkey Vulture passed so closely by that you could see it’s eye color.
If you look very closely, I think you can see right through it’s nostrils.
(R. Juncosa 11-23-20)

A contemplative Marbled Godwit (R. Juncosa 11-23-20

Footprints in time. For awhile, anyway. (L. Johnson 11-23-20)

We went over to Legacy Park – it’s not Malibu Lagoon, but still Malibu – as some of our missing ducks and a couple of “good birds” had been reported from there. As we circled the shrinking freshwater pond we were constantly surrounded by Yellow-rumped Warblers, Ruby-crowned Kinglets, and White-crowned Sparrows. Sure enough, when we reached the back side of the pond, there were at least 50 Mallards, all gathered around the feet of a woman scattering bread crumbs. Free lunch! No wonder the lagoon is empty of Mallards. We also found two Soras paddling around, but the reported wisp of Snipe had fled. Chris had been there a few days earlier and sent me some photos.

Easiest of the rails to view, the Sora often walks and swims in the open, unlike true skulkers like Black or Yellow Rail. I’ve never before seen the black facial feathers erect. (Chris Tosdevin ~11-20-20)

Even when people know the (Wilson’s) Snipe is really a real bird and not a myth that you send the naive out to catch with a sack, they often mistake it for a dowitcher because of the chunky shape and long straight bill. But Snipe (in my experience) vastly prefer fresh water, damp grass and maybe a few reeds, to brackish water and mud flats. Their streaky back and head plumage camouflages the motionless snipe very well.
(C. Tosdevin ~11-20-20)

I heard that someone thought this was not a Scaly-breasted Munia (Lonchura puntulata) but a “Checkered” Munia. I looked it up and “Checkered” is yet another of the many names for this bird. Other names: Nutmeg Mannikin, Nutmeg Finch, Spotted Munia, Spotted Mannikin, Barred Munia, Spice Finch, Spicebird, Spice Mannikin, Ricebird. Whew!) The breast feathers on this bird appear to be still growing. This common yet beautiful cage bird, native to Southeast Asia from west India to Taiwan to east Indonesia, has been feral and breeding in SoCal for at least 20 years. It was not in the bush at Legacy Park where it was supposed to be! Drat!
(Photo: C. Tosdevin ~11-20-20)

Birds new for the season: Brant, Green-winged Teal, Bufflehead, Red-breasted Merganser, Western Grebe, Mew Gull, Ring-billed Gull, Herring Gull, Glaucous-winged Gull, Forster’s Tern, Pacific Loon, Brandt’s Cormorant, Turkey Vulture, Cooper’s Hawk, Red-tailed Hawk, Tree Swallow, Bewick’s Wren, Ruby-crowned Kinglet .

Many thanks to photographers: Lillian Johnson, Ray Juncosa, Larry Loeher, Grace Murayama and Chris Tosdevin

The next three SMBAS scheduled field trips: Who knows? Not I.
The next SMBAS program: December 1, Birds and Islands, the Story of Cuba: Why the Island is Unique. Or Not. With Tom Hinnebusch, on ZOOM, 7:30 PM.
The SMBAS 10 a.m. Parent’s & Kids Birdwalk is canceled until further notice due to the near-impossibility of maintained proper masked social distancing with parents and small children.

Links: Unusual birds at Malibu Lagoon
9/23/02 Aerial photo of Malibu Lagoon

Prior checklists:
2019: Jan-June, July-Dec 
2020: Jan-July,    
2018: Jan-June, July-Dec  2017: Jan-June, July-Dec
2016: Jan-June, July-Dec
  2015: Jan-May, July-Dec
2014: Jan-July,  July-Dec 
2013: Jan-June, July-Dec
2012: Jan-June, July -Dec
2011: Jan-June, July-Dec
2010: Jan-June, July-Dec  2009: Jan-June, July-Dec.

The 10-year comparison summaries created during the Lagoon Reconfiguration Project period, despite numerous complaints, remain available on our Lagoon Project Bird Census Page. Very briefly summarized, the results unexpectedly indicate that avian species diversification and numbers improved slightly during the restoration period June’12-June’14.
[Chuck Almdale]

Malibu Census 20206/257/228/269/2410/2111/23
Temperature64-7060-6670-7766-7764-6852-64
Tide Lo/Hi HeightL-0.52L+0.71L+2.52L+3.05L+2.70L+2.17
Tide Time073308190958100406341135
(Black) Brant     1
Canada Goose88    
Gadwall314052228
American Wigeon    330
Mallard23271614  
Northern Pintail   2  
Green-winged Teal  1  12
Surf Scoter    3 
Bufflehead     10
Red-breasted Merganser     9
Ruddy Duck    935
Pied-billed Grebe 33223
Eared Grebe    11
Western Grebe     6
Rock Pigeon71046109
Mourning Dove435429
Vaux’s Swift   8  
Anna’s Hummingbird 1  1 
Allen’s Hummingbird33 112
American Coot 2 48118287
Black-bellied Plover1015661029130
Snowy Plover 826274228
Semipalmated Plover  48  
Killdeer6271218
Whimbrel51514135
Marbled Godwit1  354
Ruddy Turnstone 22162
Sanderling   397578
Least Sandpiper 22112 4
Western Sandpiper2181  
Short-billed Dowitcher  2   
Long-billed Dowitcher 4    
Spotted Sandpiper   212
Wandering Tattler 1    
Willet684740514
Heermann’s Gull9651014 85
Mew Gull     2
Ring-billed Gull     10
Western Gull1209098902153
California Gull 417121535
Herring Gull     1
Glaucous-winged Gull     1
Least Tern  2   
Caspian Tern1541   
Forster’s Tern  4  1
Royal Tern  1112  
Elegant Tern 1952211  
Red-throated Loon    1 
Pacific Loon     1
Brandt’s Cormorant1    1
Double-crested Cormorant1516184316108
Pelagic Cormorant1 1134
Brown Pelican3019855206
Great Blue Heron324333
Great Egret134201 
Snowy Egret284254
Black-crowned Night-Heron  2   
Turkey Vulture     2
Osprey  1 11
Cooper’s Hawk     1
Red-tailed Hawk     1
Belted Kingfisher  12 1
Black Phoebe155454
Say’s Phoebe   122
Vermilion Flycatcher    1 
Loggerhead Shrike   1  
California Scrub-Jay 112  
American Crow2433411
Tree Swallow     3
Rough-winged Swallow  1   
Cliff Swallow1     
Barn Swallow182220   
Bushtit2216501675 
House Wren  1 21
Marsh Wren   5 3
Bewick’s Wren     2
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher   522
Ruby-crowned Kinglet     2
Wrentit 1 1  
Western Bluebird  4   
Northern Mockingbird221 2 
European Starling6012272585
House Finch2454844
Lesser Goldfinch   222
Lawrence’s Goldfinch   15  
California Towhee   111
Song Sparrow3343712
White-crowned Sparrow    412
Western Meadowlark  25   
Hooded Oriole 7    
Red-winged Blackbird 1    
Great-tailed Grackle3202 28
Orange-crowned Warbler   42 
Common Yellowthroat1 4458
Yellow Warbler   2  
Yellow-rumped Warbler    108
Totals by TypeJunJulAugSepOctNov
Waterfowl6275221817125
Water Birds – Other47403099146617
Herons, Egrets & Ibis613142597
Quail & Raptors001015
Shorebirds3058197248229175
Gulls & Terns14435836412922688
Doves11139101218
Other Non-Passerines3411123
Passerines1379915279135170
Totals Birds4406607906195731808
       
Total SpeciesJunJulAugSepOctNov
Waterfowl333347
Water Birds – Other444579
Herons, Egrets & Ibis334332
Quail & Raptors001014
Shorebirds6101012910
Gulls & Terns358528
Doves222222
Other Non-Passerines121322
Passerines111315181818
Totals Species – 96334248514862

Interesting events at Malibu Lagoon: 21 October, 2020

Small, controlled field trips in open spaces still seem feasible.
We had ten people this time.

[By Chuck Almdale]

Malibu lagoon-beach-pier (R. Juncosa 10-21-20)

We had ten masked and equidistant birders this time, including Mary Prismon and daughter Roxie, neither of whom we’d seen in at least six months. The lagoon breach had closed up and water was quite high, reaching about 6 ½ ft. on the tidal clock sidewalk. (It’s hard to be certain as the marker tiles are covered by dirt and plants.) Temperatures were good – 64 to 68° – a semi-sunny day, no breeze at all and the waves were middlin’ to good and dotted with surfers. A nice day.

Inundated tidal clock sidewalk (L Johnson 10-21-20)

Despite all the water, there were surprisingly few ducks, although there were over 100 coots. Seventeen ducks, nine of which were Ruddy Duck, which is very unusual. Not even a Mallard! The White Wagtail which had been present on 5 October when the low water left a sandy rim around lagoon and channel, was gone.

[Later note: Jimy Tallal send in a note on 11/3/20 that all the Mallards and a lot of egrets were across PCH at Legacy Park on Civic Center Way. That’s also where Chris Tosdevin saw the immature Yellow-crowned Night-Heron.]

Vermilion Flycatcher (C. Tosdevin 10-19-20)

But it was replaced by another rarity for the lagoon – a Vermilion Flycatcher. The bird had been there for at least two days, as Chris Tosdevin photographed it on the 19th. This was the first sighting at the lagoon for him and for all of us, and was a life bird for one of our group. It looked like a first year male as the vermilion on the center of the breast was incomplete. This bird’s breeding range extends from SoCal (Morongo Valley) to central Texas and south all the way to Argentina, but the birds that winter along the SoCal coast must come from nearby. He was madly flying and flitting and flycatching all over the west end of the channel, making the taking of photographs quite a challenge.

Common Yellowthroat male at home (R. Juncosa 10-21-20)

We beat our way along the path to the beach, but other than several large bands of Bushtits, there weren’t many birds. Yellow-rumped Warblers were scattered in ones and twos, the Common Yellowthroats were in bushes and reeds around the edges of the channels, and the two Orange-crowned Warblers were gleaning tiny ants – Argentinian, I suppose – from leafy bushes.

Yellow-rumped Warbler (R. Juncosa 10-21-20)

The eminently surfable waves were washing over the offshore rocks, so no birds there, but several Pelagic Cormorants dove and swam in the surf zone, looking like snake birds. Far offshore a loon flew by. It looked like a Red-throated, slender, with head and tail lower than back and mostly pale underneath, although October is a bit early for them.

Cormorants & Egret in a reflective mood (R. Juncosa 10-21-20)

Several groups of Sanderlings, totaling 75 birds, ran back and forth with the lapping waves. Ray commented that they were feeding only on the wet sand. As the water retreated, they’d run down to the wettest portion they could reach, quickly poke around, then run back up to avoid getting knocked down by the next incoming wavelet. Here’s what Terres’ Audubon Society Encyclopedia of North American Birds says about this behavior:

Sanderling scatter to avoid a wave (C. Bragg 10-21-20)

…on wet beaches of coasts, probes vigorously with partly opened bill, making series of small holes in straight or curving lines to catch minute crustaceans (beach “fleas,” hippa crabs, shrimps, etc.), also eats small mollusks (mussels, for example), marine worms (Bent, 1927)…

Sanderling on foam (R. Juncosa 10-21-20)

I’ve never heard of a “hippa crab,” so I looked them up. They’re crustaceans, ten-legged (order: Decapoda), known as Sand Crabs (family Hippidae), and they fall into three genera Emerita, Hippa and Mastigochirus. At this point, confusion takes over. Around here, it may be the Pacific Mole Crab (Hippa pacifica), or it may be the Pacific Mole Crab (Emerita analoga). [Not a typo]. Or these two may be the exact same animal. Wikipedia on Hippa says Hippa “is closely related to the genus Emerita, and species have often been transferred between the two genera.” Wikipedia on  Emerita says ” the related genus Hippa is found across the Indo-Pacific, including Australia.” So it’s Emerita analoga (I concluded) who live in our SoCal “swash zones,” the area of the sandy beach constantly washed over by incoming waves.  This site says Emerita analoga ranges from Baja’s Magdalena Bay to Alaska, and grow to 1.4” long and 1” wide.  

Female Pacific Mole Crab Emerita analoga (Wikipedia)

It turned out I’ve caught-and-released many of these creatures. It’s easy and fun and they wriggle in your hands, trying to burrow backwards between your fingers to hide, just as they do in the wave-washed sand. Unfortunately for them, it’s also easy for gulls, sandpipers and surf fishermen to catch them, only they don’t “release.”

Link to a very nice PBS Deep Look film on Pacific Mole Crabs and some discussion.
Link to an autobiography by a Pacific Mole (or Sand) Crab.

Beach, waves & pier (L. Johnson 10-21-20)

Sanderlings are only 8” long and there’s no way (on God’s Green Earth!!) they’ll be swallowing a 1.4” x 1” crab. Whatever they were catching was invisible to our naked human eyes. My guess is that they were catching really really small crabs – crabs have to start really really small, before they reach 1.4” long, right? – or eggs; perhaps mole crab eggs, perhaps grunion eggs, perhaps any number of invertebrate eggs. I have seen Marbled Godwits and Whimbrels snagging the larger 1.4” Mole Crabs from the “swash zone.”  I welcome enlightenment from any of our readers on what they might have been eating.

Ray photographs the sandpipers (L. Johnson 10-21-20)

That mystery now unsolved, we wandered over to the lagoon edge where the sandpipers and plovers, such as they were, were spread out along the water’s edge. Leaving out the 75 Sanderlings in the swash zone, of the 154 sandpipers and plovers, 91 were Black-bellied Plover, 42 were Snowy Plover, and the few remaining birds were in five species. They were mostly snoozing, or trying to snooze. About 10 of the 42 Snowy Plovers were busily running around; the rest sat in their little dimples in the sand, soaking up the sun. I saw no banded birds.

Snowy Plover (R. Juncosa 10-21-20)

The Ruddy Turnstones and the other plovers and ‘pipers were all well into their winter (or basic) plumages.

Ruddy Turnstone steps lightly (R. Juncosa 10-21-20)

Birds new for the season: Surf Scoter, Ruddy Duck, Eared Grebe, Anna’s Hummingbird, Red-throated Loon, Vermilion Flycatcher, White-crowned Sparrow, Yellow-rumped Warbler.

South channel to lagoon (L. Johnson 10-21-20)

Birds new for the season: Northern Pintail, Vaux’s Swift, Marbled Godwit, Sanderling, Spotted Sandpiper, Say’s Phoebe, Loggerhead Shrike, Marsh Wren, Blue-gray Gnatcatcher, Lesser Goldfinch, Lawrence’s Goldfinch, California Towhee, Orange-crowned Warbler, Yellow Warbler.

Many thanks to photographers: Chuck Bragg, Lillian Johnson, Ray Juncosa, and Chris Tosdevin.

The next three SMBAS scheduled field trips: Who knows? Not I.
The next SMBAS program: November 3, Seaweed Faceoff! with Lauren Smith, on ZOOM, 7:30 PM.
The SMBAS 10 a.m. Parent’s & Kids Birdwalk is canceled until further notice due to the near-impossibility of maintained proper masked social distancing with parents and small children.

Links: Unusual birds at Malibu Lagoon
9/23/02 Aerial photo of Malibu Lagoon

Prior checklists:
2019: Jan-June, July-Dec 
2020: Jan-July,    
2018: Jan-June, July-Dec  2017: Jan-June, July-Dec
2016: Jan-June, July-Dec
  2015: Jan-May, July-Dec
2014: Jan-July,  July-Dec 
2013: Jan-June, July-Dec
2012: Jan-June, July -Dec
2011: Jan-June, July-Dec
2010: Jan-June, July-Dec  2009: Jan-June, July-Dec.

The 10-year comparison summaries created during the Lagoon Reconfiguration Project period, despite numerous complaints, remain available on our Lagoon Project Bird Census Page. Very briefly summarized, the results unexpectedly indicate that avian species diversification and numbers improved slightly during the restoration period June’12-June’14.
[Chuck Almdale]

Malibu Census 20205/226/257/228/269/2410/21
Temperature68-7364-7060-6670-7766-7764-68
Tide Lo/Hi HeightH+3.53L-0.52L+0.71L+2.52L+3.05L+2.70
Tide Time103107330819095810040634
Canada Goose1488   
Gadwall343140522
American Wigeon     3
Mallard1223271614 
Northern Pintail    2 
Green-winged Teal   1  
Surf Scoter     3
Ruddy Duck     9
Pied-billed Grebe  3322
Eared Grebe     1
Western Grebe1     
Rock Pigeon 7104610
Mourning Dove 43542
Vaux’s Swift    8 
Anna’s Hummingbird  1  1
Allen’s Hummingbird433 11
American Coot4 2 48118
Black-bellied Plover1410156610291
Snowy Plover  8262742
Semipalmated Plover   48 
Killdeer2627121
Whimbrel185151413
Marbled Godwit41  35
Ruddy Turnstone  2216
Sanderling    3975
Least Sandpiper  22112 
Western Sandpiper 2181 
Short-billed Dowitcher   2  
Long-billed Dowitcher  4   
Spotted Sandpiper    21
Wandering Tattler  1   
Willet16847405
Heermann’s Gull49651014 
Western Gull21012090989021
California Gull  417121
Glaucous-winged Gull3     
Least Tern2  2  
Caspian Tern601541  
Forster’s Tern   4  
Royal Tern55  1112 
Elegant Tern  1952211 
Red-throated Loon     1
Brandt’s Cormorant 1    
Double-crested Cormorant141516184316
Pelagic Cormorant 1 113
Brown Pelican943019855
Great Blue Heron 32433
Great Egret 134201
Snowy Egret328425
Black-crowned Night-Heron1  2  
Osprey1  1 1
Cooper’s Hawk1     
Belted Kingfisher   12 
Black Phoebe 15545
Say’s Phoebe    12
Vermilion Flycatcher     1
Loggerhead Shrike    1 
California Scrub-Jay  112 
American Crow224334
Rough-winged Swallow   1  
Cliff Swallow 1    
Barn Swallow10182220  
Bushtit62216501675
House Wren   1 2
Marsh Wren    5 
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher    52
Wrentit  1 1 
Western Bluebird   4  
Northern Mockingbird2221 2
European Starling960122725
House Finch16245484
Lesser Goldfinch    22
Lawrence’s Goldfinch    15 
California Towhee1   11
Song Sparrow1233437
White-crowned Sparrow     4
Western Meadowlark   25  
Hooded Oriole  7   
Red-winged Blackbird  1   
Great-tailed Grackle43202 2
Orange-crowned Warbler    42
Common Yellowthroat 1 445
Yellow Warbler    2 
Yellow-rumped(Aud) Warbler     10
Totals by TypeMayJunJulAugSepOct
Waterfowl606275221817
Water Birds – Other11347403099146
Herons, Egrets & Ibis461314259
Quail & Raptors200101
Shorebirds393058197248229
Gulls & Terns33414435836412922
Doves0111391012
Other Non-Passerines4341112
Passerines621379915279135
Totals Birds618440660790619573
       
Total SpeciesMayJunJulAugSepOct
Waterfowl333334
Water Birds – Other444457
Herons, Egrets & Ibis233433
Quail & Raptors200101
Shorebirds561010129
Gulls & Terns635852
Doves022222
Other Non-Passerines112132
Passerines91113151818
Totals Species – 84323342485148