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California Department of Fish and Game Exposed: Burrowing Owl Guidelines Supressed

Burrowing Owl photo by Larry Jordan

If you are concerned about the conservation of bird species in the world and more specifically Burrowing Owls in California please download the Guidance for Burrowing Owl Conservation and read this document.  It has been sitting on a desk at the California Department of Fish and Game for at least two years.

This document, dated April 14, 2008, opens with the following statement, “Additional immediate protection is needed for the Burrowing Owl (Athene cunicularia), a vulnerable California Bird Species of Special Concern (Gervais et al. 2008) and federal Bird of Conservation Concern (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 2002), that was the subject of a listing petition to the State of California Fish and Game Commission in 2003. Most Burrowing Owl populations in California still face the same primary threats they did three decades ago (Gervais et al. 2008). Burrowing Owl population declines continue, primarily caused by habitat loss and control of California ground squirrels (Spermophilus beecheyi) and other host burrowers.”

The California Department of Fish and Game (CDFG) has been promoting this decline by giving the go ahead to developers who discover Burrowing Owls on the property where they want to build their homes.  The developer hires a wildlife biologist to create an “eviction plan” which goes to the CDFG for approval.  What does the plan contain?  A method to evict the owls, demolish their burrows, and kill all the remaining ground squirrels to make sure the owls (which have a very high degree of nest site fidelity) have no place to return to (download the eviction plan for the recent Antioch burrowing owls at Blue Ridge (1.4 MB) to see what I’m talking about).

This is just one example of Burrowing Owl evictions that are going on all over the state.  If it wasn’t for the diligence and persistence of Scott Artis over at JournOwl, we may never have know about this plan to evict a colony of eleven owls at his location (Scott has several posts on the Antioch owls that you can access from the right hand column on his blog).

How many Burrowing Owl evictions are going on in other areas of the state?  We don’t know but we need to find out if we want to help reverse their declining numbers.  At the last Burrowing Owl Consortium meeting in Livermore last Saturday the estimates of their decline since the last survey in 1993 by the Institute for Bird Populations were 8% statewide and an astonishing 27% in the San Francisco Bay Area and Sacramento Delta Region.

It is time to monitor these destructive CDFG practices in California involving the Burrowing Owl.  It is time to put pressure on the CDFG to enact a new conservation plan for the Burrowing Owl in California, as stated in the Guidance for Burrowing Owl Conservation, to protect this Species of Special Concern and stop heading down this road we are on toward their endangered status.

YOU CAN HELP!  I have a letter you can print out and sign and mail to the Attorney General’s Office and the Director of CDFG asking the Attorney General to investigate this practice as to its legal status.  According to their own guidelines, this eviction practice results in take of this beautiful bird.  “Take” according to the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, means “pursue, hunt, shoot, capture, collect, or kill, or attempt to pursue, hunt, shoot, capture, collect, or kill.”

I believe we have taken enough Burrowing Owls and can’t afford to take even one more, for any reason.

Comments on this entry are closed.

  • Lara Neusiedler February 9, 2010, 1:57 am

    wonderful creatures!
    .-= Lara Neusiedler´s last blog ..slippery when frozen =-.

  • Amber Coakley February 9, 2010, 10:09 pm

    Hi Larry,

    I’m glad to see that momentum continues to build toward the goal of changing the CDFG approach to solving conflicts between developers and the Burrowing Owls. I’ll stay tuned!
    .-= Amber Coakley´s last blog ..Why I Still Love the Squirrels Who Ruined My Truck =-.

  • Marites February 9, 2010, 10:55 pm

    magnificent bird and really good captures. Gee, the eviction plan for the owl, sounds cruel and totally against the law of nature. I hope the proper authorities will act on this soon enough. If i’m a citizen of your country, i’d probably be joining in your petition.
    .-= Marites´s last blog ..PAL’s Year of the Tiger Seat Sale =-.

  • Bill S. February 10, 2010, 5:44 am

    California is not the only state that does not protect their birds. Here in Idaho we have to wait and wait and then lose the fight. Great pictures.
    .-= Bill S.´s last blog ..Great Horned Owls – Market Lake =-.

  • Dawn Fine February 10, 2010, 1:29 pm

    Thanks for making it easy for others to write to the Attorney General!
    I will print this out and send..Thanks
    .-= Dawn Fine´s last blog ..Sonoran Desert Museum ..The Birds =-.

  • Thomas February 13, 2010, 9:14 pm

    Nice shots and this is a neat initiative to promote conservation.
    .-= Thomas´s last blog ..Indian Wildlife – Bonnet Macaque =-.

  • Anita April 12, 2011, 7:41 pm

    Thank you for the information about CDFG and the burrowing owls. I have stumbled on a breeding pair and am trying to educate myself on their habitat and behavior. So sad to hear that CDFG is part of the problem.

  • Cynthia March 26, 2013, 11:56 am

    I just discovered a pair of burrowing owls in my back yard. I am so excited for spring to watch the babies hatch!! We are planning to put a fence up around there nest area to help protect them.

  • Larry March 26, 2013, 9:32 pm

    @Cynthia you are one lucky lady! Where do you live that you have these beautiful little owls in your back yard?