Armed with binoculars and aerial photo maps four league staff members were joined by a couple of staff from the department of fish and wildlife and a pair of consultants to search for potential nest sites for the marbled murrelet.
Marbled murrelet redwoods.
A seabird that s also a forest bird the marbled murrelet fishes along the foggy pacific coast then flies inland to nest in mossy old growth trees.
It nests in old growth forests or on the ground at higher latitudes where trees cannot grow.
Marbled murrelets use their wings for swimming underwater reaching depths of 90 feet.
Mottled in milk chocolate brown during the summer adults change into stark black and white for winter.
The league s shady dell property was a busy place on monday.
Courtship foraging loafing molting and preening occur in near shore marine waters.
Saving the marbled murrelet in 1974 at california s big basin redwood state park the marbled murrelet the enigma of the pacific won the distinction of being the last bird species in the united states to have its nesting site discovered.
The egg sucking chick eating steller s jay.
Marbled murrelets nest in oregon from mid april to mid september.
The marbled murrelet brachyramphus marmoratus is a small seabird from the north pacific it is a member of the auk family.
However larger unfragmented stands of old growth appear to be the highest quality habitat for marbled murrelet nesting.
These stocky little birds dive for zooplankton and fish using their wings to fly underwater.
Nesting stands are dominated by douglas fir in oregon and washington and by old growth redwoods in california.
Because marbled murrelets are a legally threatened species logging activities are restricted in areas of redwood forest with known marbled murrelet nesting sites or even potential nest sites.
The close association of the marbled murrelet and old growth coastal forests and the science and conservation work done make the murrelets truly an iconic bird in redwood national and state parks.
If you are in the parks in the summertime before the sun comes up you may even hear or see the elusive endangered marbled murrelet brachyramphus marmoratus.
Old growth and second growth conifer forest dominated by coastal redwoods cover the majority of the parks area.
In this way the endangered species act has helped protect old growth redwoods since marbled murrelets were listed in 1992.
A marbled murrelet.
Throughout their range marbled murrelets are opportunistic feeders and utilize prey of diverse sizes and species.
And about that arcane nickname even though scientists didn t know that marbled murrelets lived up in the old redwood trees before the early 1970s.
Its habit of nesting in trees was suspected but not documented until a tree climber found a chick in 1974 making it one of the last north american bird species to have its nest.
Yet even though the state s remaining old growth redwood trees are now protected the murrelets continue to disappear.