Date: 8/10/25 10:55 pm
From: Naresh Satyan via groups.io <naresh.satyan...>
Subject: [LACoBirds] 2025 LA River Fall Shorebird Survey: Day 1 results
Hi all,

Obviously the main shorebird attraction of the day was the Bar-tailed
Godwit in Playa del Rey, but today was also the first of three surveys of
shorebirds in the Los Angeles river planned for this fall. This is the
third year of the survey in its current form. Many thanks to all the
birders who contributed their time and effort this morning -- I'm sure some
would rather have been birding along Ballona creek instead, but we covered
most of the river.

Today's results (August 10, 2025) are here:
https://ebird.org/tripreport/401630

[For comparison, here are the results from the past two years:
August 11, 2024: https://ebird.org/tripreport/266429
August 12, 2023: https://ebird.org/tripreport/150893]

Going upstream from the river mouth, coverage was as follows. In Long
Beach, Jeff Boyd surveyed between Golden Shore and Willow St, Jon Fisher
counted from Willow St to Wardlow Rd, and Lance Benner from Wardlow to
Alondra Blvd. Dick Barth surveyed the river in the Paramount area from
Alondra to Rosecrans. In the South Gate-Maywood area, Mark and Janet Scheel
from Florence Ave to Atlantic Blvd. Andy Birch surveyed all locations with
good shorebird habitat from the 110/5 Fwy intersection up to Glendale
Narrows. Naresh Satyan surveyed the Sepulveda basin dam area and Buena
Vista Park in Burbank. Except for a stretch of the river in South Gate
(which has had no shorebirds yet on previous visits this year anyway), we
effectively looked at every part of the river that has any shorebird
habitat.

It was a pleasant morning, with temperatures ranging from 63 to 73 degrees
F. There was a marine layer over much of the river for most of the morning,
and there was very little wind. It was a low flood tide at the river mouth
in Long Beach. Water levels in the river were very high throughout the
survey area, with strong flow in the central channel.

Early August numbers of shorebirds continued to be extremely low for the
third consecutive year. We somehow managed to have even fewer Western
Sandpipers in 2025 (only 21 birds) compared to August 11, 2024 (76) and
August 12, 2023 (290). The count of 6826 Western Sandpipers on the lower LA
river by Dan Cooper et al on August 16, 2000 is now a distant memory. There
were also no uncommon birds today.

Hopefully shorebird numbers will increase later in the year. There will be
two follow-up surveys this fall, on August 30 and September 20.

Regards,
Naresh

--
Naresh Satyan
Pasadena, CA
Los Angeles Birders -- www.labirders.org


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