BCR 32.
Coastal California

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| California Thrasher. Photo: ©
Dick Cannings, NatureServe |
A Mediterranean climate of
hot, dry summers and cool moist winters creates conditions
for chaparral vegetation in the low mountains along the coast
that extend into Baja California. Characteristic high priority
chaparral birds include Nuttall's
Woodpecker, Oak
Titmouse, California
Thrasher, and Lawrence's
Goldfinch. The coastline provides habitat for several
waterfowl and shorebird species, and is an important wintering
area for Marbled
Godwit, American Avocet, and Surfbird.
Most of the world's populations of Ashy
Storm-Petrel and Xantus'
Murrelet nest on a small number of offshore islands. A
sizable proportion of the Elegant
Tern and Heermann's
Gull populations spend the non-breeding season here. Millions
of Sooty Shearwaters gather in pelagic waters each fall, joined
by numbers of other shearwaters, storm-petrels, and alcids.
The Central Valley of California lies in this region between
the Coast Ranges and the Sierra Nevada. Wetlands and associated
uplands in the Central Valley provide roosting and foraging
habitat for 60% of the waterfowl that winter in the Pacific
flyway, including a majority of the continental Northern Pintail
population. Approximately 95% of the Central Valley's depressional
wetlands and 84% of riparian habitat have been lost, primarily
to agriculture. A good deal of the remaining wetland habitat
is protected within National Wildlife Refuges, but the majority
is privately managed for waterfowl hunting. Among landbirds,
the Central Valley is the center of the small ranges of the
Tricolored
Blackbird and Yellow-billed
Magpie and also provides dwindling habitat for a host
of riparian birds such as Least Bell's Vireo.
Important Bird Areas
in this BCR
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| Tricolored Blackbird. Photo: USFWS |
Camp Pendleton (Santa
Margarita River Valley)
Carrizo
Plain National Monument
Colusa
National Wildlife Refuge
Cosumnes
River Preserve
Delevan
National Wildlife Refuge
Don
Edwards National Wildlife Refuge (San
Francisco Bay)
Elkhorn
Slough National Estuarine Research Reserve, including
Moss
Landing Wildlife Area and Moss
Landing State Beach
Lake Hodges (San
Dieguito River Park)
Los
Padres National Forest
Merced National Wildlife
Refuge (The
Grasslands Ecological Area)
Monterey
Bay National Marine Sanctuary
Morro
Bay, including Montana
de Oro State Park, Moro Strand State Beach and Estero
Bay
Mugu Lagoon
Napa-Solano Marshes Wildlife
Area
Point
Reyes National Seashore
Sacramento
National Wildlife Refuge, including Butte Sink and Sacramento
River National Wildlife Refuges
San
Bernadino National Forest
San
Clemente Island
San
Luis National Wildlife Refuge (The
Grasslands Ecological Area)
Santa
Cruz Island Preserve (Channel
Islands National Park)
Sequoia
National Forest
San
Francisco Bay National Wildlife Refuge, including Almeda
National Wildlife Refuge
San
Diego National Wildlife Refuge Complex including South
San Diego Bay Unit, and Tijuana
Slough National Wildlife Refuge
Suisun
Marsh, including Grizzly
Island Wildlife Area, Hill Slough Wildlife Area, and Peytonia
Slough Ecological Reserve
Sutter National Wildlife
Refuge
Sweetwater
Marsh National Wildlife Refuge (San
Diego National Wildlife Refuge Complex)
Volta Wildlife Management
Area (The
Grasslands Ecological Area)
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