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President’s Annual Appeal reminder for 2025

(Photo: Grace Murayama 7-23-17)
We are asking you to consider giving us your support this year. Remember, this is our only fund raising effort. We don’t pester you weekly, monthly, or throughout the year. Your help allows our all-volunteer group to accomplish our mission “to be a center for wildlife education, habitat protection, and conservation issues that involve birds.”
These efforts are of increasing importance in view of the past decreasing support for environmental issues coming from the Federal Administration.
You can DONATE four different ways:
- With the self-addressed envelope enclosed with the annual appeal letter (sent to those already on our membership rolls)
- Send a check to our mailing address: SMBAS, PO Box 35, Pacific Palisades, CA 90272
- With PayPal using the PayPal Widget located on the right side bar of the blog
- With a Credit Card using the same PayPal Widget located on the right side bar of the blog. You do not have to join PayPal to donate, just have your credit card “standing by.”
Please take a moment and make a donation today.
We continue our strong backing of all things birds, habitat, native plants, the environment and conservation through education, field trips, bird monitoring, speakers and grants to students and conservation groups.
Please take a minute to read the annual appeal letter below and see what we have been doing this year.
Thank you,
Jean Garrett
President
Link to our online 2025-26 Calendar of Field Trips and Programs
Dear Friend of SMBAS, November 6, 2025
As we write this letter, we are acutely aware of the consequences of the Palisades Fire for many of our members, neighbors, and friends. We hope for their recovery and continuing interest in nature in general and especially in birds. Most of you know, this is our only financial appeal of the year. As an all-volunteer chapter our expenses are low, but our activities are frequent and with great local impact. Our members have supported us over the decades and we hope you will help us continue in our mission.
This year we are welcoming several new members – five and counting – to the Board of SMBAS. As time progresses, you’ll probably see a gradual change in our activities and outreach that corresponds to a younger population on the board. We’re also looking forward to next year as Santa Monica Bay Audubon Society celebrates its 50th Anniversary.
We are approaching the end of the year along with the holiday season and hope it gives you the opportunity to celebrate. Please remember that local birding is at its best for the next six months, so we hope to see you on a field trip in the near future.
Please join us and encourage your friends to do so. Our activities are all free and most have no attendance limit. If you’re experienced or want to start joining our leadership, we welcome co-leaders. Just get in touch with the leader listed on the blog announcement.

Jean Garrett, President SMBAS
Your support helps these activities and services to continue:
- The Blog: In addition to advance announcements and follow-up reports of all our activities, our blog has frequent interesting articles on birds, nature and science in general. There are occasional longer series on subjects like avian taxonomy and polyandry. The blog also has permanent pages on special topics: Animal rescue information, Western Snowy Plovers, 80 L.A. Co. Birding Areas, Malibu Lagoon, Calendar, Grant Applications, The Tongva, Birds in the Bible, Locating Birds for Others, Zoom Recordings. When you give that www.smbas.org address to your friends and acquaintances, make sure you encourage them to explore the multiple links on our site. It’s a treasury of history, local knowledge and bird lore!
- Malibu Lagoon monthly bird walks: (4th Sunday–not the last), we welcome new and experienced birders at 8:30 and ‘Kids and Parents’ at 10 am.
- Field Trips: Held October—June to nearby destinations, usually on the 2nd Saturday of the month. Currently scheduled: 13 Dec: Back Bay Newport; 14 Feb: Madrona Marsh; 14 Mar: Sepulveda Basin. Remember to check smbas.org for updates and adjustments!
- Evening Programs: October through December and February through May, an online program on scientific, travel, or conservation topics. Please check smbas.org for our next program. Sign up on the blog to receive all announcements in your inbox.
- Your funding helps support:
- Endowments with Santa Monica College Foundation and Loyola Marymount University supply scholarship aid to biology or ecology students.
- Grants up to $600 to students at local colleges and universities for research on local species and environments. We would love to expand the number of awards as the costs for students keeps ballooning.
- Funding for bus transportation for inner city children to visit and explore Ballona Saltwater Lagoon. The number of buses we pay for depends on our annual fundraising.
- Sponsorship of student summer internship with Student Conservation Association.
- Staffing the Annual Coastal Cleanup station at Malibu Lagoon State Beach for Heal the Bay, [held on the 3rd Saturday of September.]
- Our conservation activities include: Regular monitoring of our beloved Western Snowy Plovers, monitoring and encouraging the Bay Foundation’s Dune Restoration program on local beaches, special letter-writing and appearances before local and national organizations to develop influence. We alert our readers to letter-writing campaigns in conjunction with other organizations to oppose or support legislation.
Please check the blog www.smbasblog.com for changes and updates.
[posted by Chuck Almdale]
President’s Annual Appeal for 2025

We are asking you to consider giving us your support this year. Remember, this is our only fund raising effort. We don’t pester you weekly, monthly, or throughout the year. Your help allows our all-volunteer group to accomplish our mission “to be a center for wildlife education, habitat protection, and conservation issues that involve birds.”
These efforts are of increasing importance in view of the past decreasing support for environmental issues coming from the Federal Administration.
You can DONATE four different ways:
- With the self-addressed envelope enclosed with the annual appeal letter (sent to those already on our membership rolls)
- Send a check to our mailing address: SMBAS, PO Box 35, Pacific Palisades, CA 90272
- With PayPal using the PayPal Widget located on the right side bar of the blog
- With a Credit Card using the same PayPal Widget located on the right side bar of the blog. You do not have to join PayPal to donate, just have your credit card “standing by.”
Please take a moment and make a donation today.
We continue our strong backing of all things birds, habitat, native plants, the environment and conservation through education, field trips, bird monitoring, speakers and grants to students and conservation groups.
Please take a minute to read the annual appeal letter below and see what we have been doing this year.
Thank you,
Jean Garrett
President
Link to our online 2025-26 Calendar of Field Trips and Programs
Dear Friend of SMBAS, November 6, 2025
As we write this letter, we are acutely aware of the consequences of the Palisades Fire for many of our members, neighbors, and friends. We hope for their recovery and continuing interest in nature in general and especially in birds. Most of you know, this is our only financial appeal of the year. As an all-volunteer chapter our expenses are low, but our activities are frequent and with great local impact. Our members have supported us over the decades and we hope you will help us continue in our mission.
This year we are welcoming several new members – five and counting – to the Board of SMBAS. As time progresses, you’ll probably see a gradual change in our activities and outreach that corresponds to a younger population on the board. We’re also looking forward to next year as Santa Monica Bay Audubon Society celebrates its 50th Anniversary.
We are approaching the end of the year along with the holiday season and hope it gives you the opportunity to celebrate. Please remember that local birding is at its best for the next six months, so we hope to see you on a field trip in the near future.
Please join us and encourage your friends to do so. Our activities are all free and most have no attendance limit. If you’re experienced or want to start joining our leadership, we welcome co-leaders. Just get in touch with the leader listed on the blog announcement.

Jean Garrett, President SMBAS
Your support helps these activities and services to continue:
- The Blog: In addition to advance announcements and follow-up reports of all our activities, our blog has frequent interesting articles on birds, nature and science in general. There are occasional longer series on subjects like avian taxonomy and polyandry. The blog also has permanent pages on special topics: Animal rescue information, Western Snowy Plovers, 80 L.A. Co. Birding Areas, Malibu Lagoon, Calendar, Grant Applications, The Tongva, Birds in the Bible, Locating Birds for Others, Zoom Recordings. When you give that www.smbas.org address to your friends and acquaintances, make sure you encourage them to explore the multiple links on our site. It’s a treasury of history, local knowledge and bird lore!
- Malibu Lagoon monthly bird walks: (4th Sunday–not the last), we welcome new and experienced birders at 8:30 and ‘Kids and Parents’ at 10 am.
- Field Trips: Held October—June to nearby destinations, usually on the 2nd Saturday of the month. Currently scheduled: 13 Dec: Back Bay Newport; 14 Feb: Madrona Marsh; 14 Mar: Sepulveda Basin. Remember to check smbas.org for updates and adjustments!
- Evening Programs: October through December and February through May, an online program on scientific, travel, or conservation topics. Please check smbas.org for our next program. Sign up on the blog to receive all announcements in your inbox.
- Your funding helps support:
- Endowments with Santa Monica College Foundation and Loyola Marymount University supply scholarship aid to biology or ecology students.
- Grants up to $600 to students at local colleges and universities for research on local species and environments. We would love to expand the number of awards as the costs for students keeps ballooning.
- Funding for bus transportation for inner city children to visit and explore Ballona Saltwater Lagoon. The number of buses we pay for depends on our annual fundraising.
- Sponsorship of student summer internship with Student Conservation Association.
- Staffing the Annual Coastal Cleanup station at Malibu Lagoon State Beach for Heal the Bay, [held on the 3rd Saturday of September.]
- Our conservation activities include: Regular monitoring of our beloved Western Snowy Plovers, monitoring and encouraging the Bay Foundation’s Dune Restoration program on local beaches, special letter-writing and appearances before local and national organizations to develop influence. We alert our readers to letter-writing campaigns in conjunction with other organizations to oppose or support legislation.
Please check the blog www.smbasblog.com for changes and updates.
[posted by Chuck Almdale]
A new island erupts from the sea | Guardian
[Posted by Chuck Almdale, submitted by Lillian Johnson]
The Guardian is a great source of environment and wildlife articles, with free access to a wide variety of topics.
A new island erupted from the sea – can it show us how nature works without human interference?
By Patrick Greenfield, 13 Oct 2025

From the article:
In the early 1980s, black-backed gulls started to nest on sections of the island, sheltering in one of the stormiest parts of the Atlantic Ocean. Their arrival kicked off an explosion of life. Guano carried seeds that quickly spread grasses along the island, fed in turn by the nutrients from the birds. For the first time, whole areas of bare rock became green.
Wasowicz says: “It’s surprising. From the times of Darwin, biologists thought that it was just plant species with fleshy fruits that could travel with birds. But the species on Surtsey do not have fleshy fruits. Almost all of the seeds on Surtsey were brought in the faeces of the gulls.”
One lesson from this living laboratory is that recovery after disturbance does not follow a single, predictable path, he says. Instead, it is shaped by multiple, sometimes surprising forces.
Vilmundardóttir says: “I feel that Iceland is really contributing something important to humankind by preserving this area. On the mainland, the impact of humans is everywhere. When I am on Surtsey, I am really in nature. All you can hear are the birds. You see orcas along the coastline and the seals popping out and watching.”

[Posted by Chuck Almdale]
Pacific Coast Highway: As of this moment, things seem fine. Rain, however, is predicted for this week, so…you never know.
Barring a total downpour on Sunday morning at 7:30am and unlikely to stop, SMBAS lagoon trips (8:30am general and 10am parents & kids) are happening.
Here in deep and dark December it’s a great day for the lagoon. It’s often sunny, although once lagoon edges were encrusted with ice. A veritable googolplex of species. Dress in layers for cool weather, wind or fog, or even sun and heat. On December 28 there’s nothing else going on, the batteries already died in your new toys, so you might as well go birding at the lagoon.

Some of the great birds we’ve had in December are:
Snow & Ross’s Geese, Pintail, Cinnamon & Green-winged Teals, Long-tailed Duck, Red-breasted Merganser, Red-throated, Pacific & Common Loons, Eared, Horned & Western Grebes, Brandt’s & Pelagic Cormorants, Turkey Vulture, Osprey, Red-shouldered Hawk, Peregrine Falcon, Snowy Plover, Black Oystercatcher, American Avocet, Spotted Sandpiper, Marbled Godwit, Wilson’s Snipe, Boneparte’s, Lesser Black-backed & Glaucous-winged Gulls, Black Skimmer, Anna’s & Allen’s Hummingbirds, Belted Kingfisher, Say’s Phoebe, Bewick’s & House Wrens, Wrentit, Spotted & California Towhees, Great-tailed Grackle, Lesser & American Goldfinchs. Phew!
Weather prediction as of 22 December:
Sunny, cool. Temp: 50-61°, Wind: NE 10>14 mph, Clouds: 18%, rain: 8%
Tide: mid, falling to low: Low: 1.35 ft. @ 10:47am; High: +4.81 ft. @ 3:38am.
Nov 23 trip report link
Adult Walk 8:30 a.m., 4th Sunday of every month. Adults, teens and children you deem mature enough to be with adults. Beginners and experienced, 2-3 hours, meeting at the metal-shaded viewing area between parking lot and channel. Species range from 35 in June to 60-75 during migrations and winter. We move slowly and check everything as we move along. When lagoon outlet is closed we may continue east around the lagoon to Adamson House. We put out special effort to make our monthly Malibu Lagoon walks attractive to first-time and beginning birdwatchers. So please, if you are at all worried about coming on a trip and embarrassing yourself because of all the experts, we remember our first trips too. Someone showed us the birds; now it’s our turn. Bring your birding questions.
Children and Parents Walk, 10:00 a.m., 4th Sunday of every month: One hour session, meeting at the metal-shaded viewing area between parking lot and channel. We start at 10:00 for a shorter walk and to allow time for families to get it together on a sleepy Sunday morning. Our leaders are experienced with kids so please bring them to the beach! We have an ample supply of binoculars that children can use without striking terror into their parents. We want to see families enjoying nature. (If you have a Scout Troop or other group of more than seven people, you must call Jean (213-522-0062) to make sure we have enough binoculars, docents and sand.)
Directions: Malibu Lagoon is at the intersection of Pacific Coast Highway (PCH) and Cross Creek Road, west of Malibu Pier and the bridge, 15 miles west of Santa Monica via PCH. We gather in the metal-shaded area near the parking lot. Look around for people wearing binoculars. Neither Google Maps nor the State Park website supply a street address for the parking lot. The address they DO supply is for Adamson House which is just east of the Malibu Creek bridge.
Parking: Parking machine recently installed in the lagoon lot: 1 hr $3; 2 hrs $6; 3 hrs $9, all day $12 ($11 seniors); credit cards accepted. Annual passes accepted. You may also park (read the signs carefully) either along PCH west of Cross Creek Road, on Cross Creek Road, or on Civic Center Way north (inland) of the shopping center. Lagoon parking in shopping center lots is not permitted.

[Written & posted by Chuck Almdale]
Great Short Bird Videos | NAS 2023
[Posted by Chuck Almdale]
These are the best short (under 45 seconds) videos from the National Audubon Society 2023 photography contest, all demonstrating the kind of behavior you hope to see every time you go birding. 15 short films
Everyone enjoys blowing off a little steam in winter.

Ten unusual bird behavior photos | NAS 2023
How the Pandemic Lockdowns Changed a Songbird’s Beak | Pamela Yeh & the UCLA Juncos
[Posted by Chuck Almdale, submitted by Ray Juncosa]
This story is about the work UCLA evolutionary biologist Pamela Yeh has been doing with our local Dark-eyed Juncos on the UCLA campus. This is work that SMBAS has helped fund for several years, in addition to the Zoom presentations she and her staff have given to our chapter. If you have donated to SMBAS in the past, this was (as they say on TV) Your Dollars At Work! We have another such presentation scheduled for next spring, I believe.
Link to the PNAS paper by Diamant & Yeh. https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2520996122
Link to their last SMBAS Zoom program.
Click this link or click the photo below to go to the New York Times article.
If the N.Y. Times links above don’t work for you, try this one to Phys.Org, written by Sanjukta Mondal on 12-18-25; they aren’t so mingy about people reading an occasional article.
https://phys.org/news/2025-12-urban-birds-beak-rapidly-covid.html



