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California Black Oystercatchers - RESCHEDULED

Black Oystercatcher

Black Oystercatchers are among the most charismatic and easily identifiable residents of our rocky intertidal coastline. But with less than 20,000 individuals left worldwide, their future is uncertain. Audubon chapter members from Mendocino to Monterey (including Golden Gate Audubon! see our blog about this) are taking part in population surveys that shed light on the natural history of this species, from its preferred foods to how it responds to predators. Anna Weinstein, marine program director at Audubon California, will update you on this inspiring citizen-science effort and explain what is being done to protect Black Oysterctachers in a rapidly changing coastal world.

Anna Weinstein is the marine program director at Audubon California, where she has worked to protect birds and their habitats on the west coast since 2008. Previously she co-founded Island Conservation and was an environmental scientist at the San Francisco Estuary Institute. She is a leader in the study and conservation of black oystercatchers in California and in 2014 published the first statewide assessment of the distribution and abundance of the species in this state.

Editor's Note: This event has been rescheduled for one week earlier, May 12

Thursday, 05/19/16

Contact:

Website: Click to Visit

Cost:

Free

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Golden Gate Audubon Society

First Unitarian Universalist Church
1187 Franklin St
San Francisco, CA 94109

Website: Click to Visit