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2007 Annual Monitoring Report (pdf 16MB) - Bolsa Chica Lowlands ...

2007 Annual Monitoring Report (pdf 16MB) - Bolsa Chica Lowlands ...

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Western Snowy Plover Nesting at <strong>Bolsa</strong> <strong>Chica</strong>, <strong>2007</strong> December <strong>2007</strong>STI was surveyed by vehicle from the West Levee Road and on foot as part of the least tern surveys.NTI is used primarily by nesting elegant terns (Thalasseus elegans) and black skimmers (Rynchopsniger).NS1, NS2, and NS3 are sectioned by markers which form the basis for data recording. NS1 issectioned south to north from A though CC. NS1 was surveyed by vehicle, in the same manner asthe Seasonal Ponds, either from the West Levee Road or the eastern slope of NS1. Due to nestingpatterns of least terns, black skimmers, and other terns, vehicle surveys were suspended mid-seasonother than from the West Levee Road north to Section M. NS1 was also partially surveyed on foot aspart of least tern surveys from CC south to M. Each nest located on NS1 was marked with a numberedtongue depressor and mapped for ease of relocation on subsequent visits. NS2 was surveyed by vehiclefrom the East Levee Road weekly using a spotting scope and once a month on foot. There was nonesting activity on NS2 this season. NS3 was surveyed by vehicle from the north end of the site.It was usually possible to follow the movements and determine the fate of chicks of each brood sincethere was dispersion over space and time sufficient to differentiate between broods. In a few casesbanded adults identified specific broods, although banding of chicks has not been done at <strong>Bolsa</strong><strong>Chica</strong> since 2000. Broods were observed 3 - 5 days per week. These regular brood observationswere conducted to determine chick survival or fledgling production, as well as to detect movementbetween cells and use of specific cells for brood rearing.A range-wide, breeding season window survey was conducted at <strong>Bolsa</strong> <strong>Chica</strong> in May <strong>2007</strong>. Thesurvey was conducted in the same manner as in previous years and in accordance to the guidelinesset out in the Recovery Plan for the Pacific Coast Population of the Western Snowy Plover (USFWS<strong>2007</strong>).PROTECTION FROM PREDATORSOnce a nest was discovered, a welded wire mini-exclosure (ME) was anchored in place over the topof the nest and left in place until the eggs in the nest hatched. The MEs used in previous years (2-inch x 4-inch welded wire mesh, forming a cube 20 inches on a side), when centered over the nest,provided a distance of about 10 inches that a coyote (Canis latrans) must extend its forelimb throughthe ME opening to reach the eggs. Since some coyotes have been able to reach the eggs with thisdimension, wider MEs (28-inch width on all four sides and 16-inch height) were deployed in 2006that require a 14-inch reach to rake eggs out of the center of the ME-protected area. All MEs in useduring <strong>2007</strong> were of the wider variety.Observations were made of potential predators during the surveys. Predator management actionswere then enacted commensurate with the threat to snowy plover breeding activity by that specificpredator. Predator management has been a necessary recovery action for the least tern for decades.In places, such as <strong>Bolsa</strong> <strong>Chica</strong>, where snowy plover nests in proximity to the least tern, predatormanagement activities on behalf of one species will also benefit the other species. In <strong>2007</strong>, predatormanagement was undertaken by Wally Ross under contract to U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service(USFWS).Since June 2002, anchored MEs were usually deployed on every nest from the time the nest wasdiscovered until hatching. The American crow (Corvus brachyrhynchos) has been a serious,omnipresent predator of snowy plover eggs in previous years at <strong>Bolsa</strong> <strong>Chica</strong>. However, loss ofsnowy plover eggs to crows has been virtually eliminated due to the ME protection. When diggingMerkel & Associates, Inc. 6

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