Thursday, November 21, 2024

Will California’s Burrowing Owls Get Endangered Species Protection?

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The following is a press release issued by the Center for Biological Diversity:


Burrowing owl [Photo by Alan Vernon]

In response to a March 2024 petition by conservation groups, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife has found that protecting the western burrowing owl under the California Endangered Species Act may be warranted.

The department is recommending that the state’s Fish and Game Commission accept the petition for further consideration. The commission is expected to vote on whether to advance the burrowing owl to “candidate” status at its Oct. 10 meeting. If the burrowing owl becomes a candidate species, the department would have 12 to 18 months to conduct a full status review before the commission votes on an endangered or threatened designation.

“The commission should advance these state protections so California’s adorable burrowing owls can continue to grace grasslands and open spaces,” said Jeff Miller, a senior conservation advocate at the Center for Biological Diversity. “I’ve witnessed these owls disappearing from much of the state over the past two decades, and it pains me to watch their homes be bulldozed for irresponsible sprawl development.”

“We urgently need legal protections to give these distinctive owls a fighting chance for survival, especially since the existing policy framework has failed to adequately safeguard this species for decades,” said Pamela Flick, California program director with Defenders of Wildlife.

“We are relieved that the burrowing owl is now recommended as a potential candidate for special status listing, but it breaks our hearts that we had to reach this critical point,” said Shani Kleinhaus with Santa Clara Valley Audubon Society. “We hope the commission designates the Bay Area population as endangered to help these owls recover, since they bring such joy to residents of Santa Clara Valley.”

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“In mere decades, California has seen the decimation of formerly thriving populations of burrowing owls, once one of the more common birds in California,” said Scott Artis with Urban Bird Foundation.

The conservation groups Center for Biological Diversity, Defenders of Wildlife, Burrowing Owl Preservation Society, Santa Clara Valley Audubon Society, Urban Bird Foundation, Central Valley Bird Club and San Bernardino Valley Audubon Society are seeking endangered status for imperiled populations of burrowing owls in southwestern California, central-western California and the San Francisco Bay Area; and threatened status for burrowing owls in the Central Valley and southern desert range.

The only owl species that nests and roosts underground, the burrowing owl was formerly widespread in California and commonly nested in grasslands throughout low elevation areas of the state.

Burrowing owls have suffered significant habitat loss due to exurban sprawl, conversion of grasslands to agricultural lands, development of large-scale wind and solar energy infrastructure and the persecution of ground-dwelling squirrels and other mammals whose underground burrows the owls use for nesting and roosting. The owls are also killed by rodenticides and collisions with wind turbines and cars.

Protecting the burrowing owl under the state Endangered Species Act would require state and local agencies to manage threats. That would include ending the state policy of allowing owls to be excluded or removed from lands slated for development. It could also require more robust mitigation for habitat loss.

Background

Burrowing owls have been eliminated as a breeding species from almost all of the California coast and are rapidly nearing localized extinction in the Bay Area, where fewer than 25 breeding pairs remain. Only about 225 breeding pairs are left in central-western and southwestern California. Burrowing owl numbers are also declining in the Central Valley, which has fewer than 1,500 breeding pairs, mostly in the southern Central Valley.

The state’s strongholds for the species are the Imperial Valley, which has an estimated 4,000 breeding pairs, and the southern Central Valley with around 1,000 pairs. A formerly large population in the Altamont Pass area in eastern Alameda and Contra Costa counties is down to a few hundred pairs and declining rapidly.

Burrowing owls have been eliminated as a breeding species from at least 19 of the 51 California counties where they formerly occurred and are close to being wiped out in 10 other counties.

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MendoFever Staff
MendoFever Staff
Editor's Note: Whenever an article's byline reads "MendoFever Staff", the contents of that article were not composed by any of our reporters. Types of writing that will be attributed to "MendoFever Staff" include press releases, letters to the editor, op-eds, obituaries— essentially writing that is not produced by a reporter.

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