Sunday, May 12, 2013

Malibu Lagoon "Massive Fail"???

Below is a blog post by Susan Tellem, a Malibu local who has been an outspoken opponent of the Malibu Lagoon Restoration Project. Since day one, when the Wetlands Defense Fund and their posse of obstructionists to this project collected big BIG checks from those who had a vested interest in stopping the restoration, they embarked on a PR smear campaign to distort the truth about the merits to clean up the EPA deemed dysfunctional lagoon. There are too many false claims to mention here, but last month's Audubon Bird survey ( see article below the blog post by Susan Tellem ), done by experts with trained eyes will set the record straight.

 Numbers don't lie and the numbers are already quite impressive in the first few months after the restoration was completed.

Local Voices
Known as The Queen at work, Tellem is a PR maven and public safety wonk.

Malibu Lagoon: 8 Ducks, 4 Coots, a Few Mosquito Fish - Massive Fail

Posted on May 11, 2013 at 6:42 pm
After a fabulous lunch at Tra Di Noi with my hubby and kids for Mother's Day, we decided to take in the Malibu Lagoon remodeling.  Whatever it was before, it is nothing like that now.  It is a desert with no plants, animals, fish, birds, reptiles, bugs, butterflies...nothing but a few measley birds.  It is a wasteland. 
We didn't even see an ant, a lizard or a fly.  We have an entire ecosystem in our yard.  Here it's just a big cesspool of algae, dead plants, graffiti, cigarette butts and some viewing platforms that are perfect for a slippery dip into the water.  Walk on the ramp, and you'll soon be holding your nose under the faux lagoon. 
The bathrooms were missing (all that money and no real bathrooms?). The Malibu Colony people are basiclaly trapped - the back doors open on a tiny strip of land that will not allow them to even take a kid in a stroller out in a fire. There were a few visitors and a handful of surfers, but on this gorgeous May day, there were empty chairs and picnic tables and a few cars in the $12 parking .




Malibu Lagoon Field Trip Report: 28 April, 2013

APRIL 30, 2013
by 
A foggy morning at the lagoon, outlet closed, the water high, colored flags marking the small plants, an occasional unflagged weed and, frankly, not many birds. See the charts below and on our Lagoon Project Page for the statistics.
Channel area view from Las Virgenes Rd. (L. Plauzoles 04/13/13)
Channel area view from Las Virgenes Rd. (L. Plauzoles 04/13/13)
 The ducks are dwindling as springtime calls them north. It was an off day for the shorebirds, with only five “peeps” present: two Western Sandpipers, a single Ruddy Turnstone, two Spotted Sandpipers now sporting breeding breast-spots. The gulls continue to be fewer than average: we didn’t find any Ring-bills among the few California and Western Gulls, but Heermann’s, absent since January, begin to return from their breeding grounds on islands near the tip of Baja California. A single Clark’s Grebe was out past the kelp with a small group of Western Grebes.
"Elegant, my primaries! He tries that with me, Marge, and he's going to be the least tern you ever saw." (C.Bragg 2011)
“Elegant, my foot! He tries that with me, Marge, and he’s going to be the least tern you ever saw.” (C.Bragg 2011)
The Elegant Terns returned, resting en route to breeding grounds farther north. They looked great and they knew it, breasts rosy from a crustacean diet, with fine black crests. Many attempted mating. ABlack-crowned Night Heron hid in the trees by the Adamson House beach fence, a White-tailed Kite searched the perimeter, eight Semipalmated Plovers combed the beach wrack, two Black Oystercatchers worked the low-tide rocks, six Caspian and three Royal Terns kept the cacophonous Elegant Terns company, and a young male Hooded Oriole – yellow, not orange – was a nice treat near the picnic table corner.
The tidal clock was working – 8 ft. 4 in. was the time, I think. A good high tide with some wave action may well open an outlet near Adamson House.
Tidal Clock at work, ticking away (J. Kenney 4/16/13)
Tidal Clock at work, ticking away (J. Kenney 4/16/13)
Our next three field trips:  Morongo Valley Preserve, 4-5 May; Malibu Lagoon, 26 May, 8:30am; Malibu Lagoon, 23 June, 8:30am.
Our next program:  Tuesday, 7 May., 7:30 pm. Eight-legged Science: The Spider Lab at Loyola Marymount University, with Dr. Martin Ramirez. The usual reminders will be emailed from the blog.
NOTE: Our 10 a.m. Parent’s & Kids Birdwalks have resumed.
Comments on Bird Lists BelowTotal Birds:   March total birds of 666 are 34% below average; low numbers are mainly in the Brown Pelicans (-158) and Gulls & Terns (-197).
Species Diversity:  April 2013 with 56 species was 2% below the 57.2 6-year average, a minor variance.
Summary of species diversity from the 6-year average so far:  June -10%, July +10%, Aug. -6%, Sep. -20%, Oct. +5%, Nov +2%, Dec -4%, Jan +2%, Feb -8%, March +9%, April -2%. Still, the only constant is change.
10-year comparison summaries are available on our Lagoon Project Bird Census Page.   [Chuck Almdale]
200820092010201120122013
27-Apr26-Apr25-Apr24-Apr22-Apr28-Apr
Temperature75-9060-7062-7059-6860-6557-68
Tide Lo/Hi HeightL +0.5H +3.7H +4.57L +0.19H +3.67L -1.10Ave.
Tide Time100011280744101411060609Birds
Brant1331.2
Gadwall1561224141213.8
American Wigeon492.2
Mallard25162022163021.5
Northern Shoveler122.0
Surf Scoter305.0
Red-brstd Merganser43532.5
Ruddy Duck1039207.0
Pacific Loon22420315.3
Common Loon1310.8
Pied-billed Grebe441262.8
Eared Grebe621.3
Western Grebe5035212819.3
Brandt’s Cormorant813173.3
Dble-crstd Cormorant25142219652227.8
Pelagic Cormorant211211.2
Brown Pelican35781827408034191.5
Great Blue Heron214121.7
Great Egret22221.3
Snowy Egret871311999.5
Blk-crwnd N-Heron11110.7
Red-tailed Hawk120.5
Sora1110.5
American Coot65383532955853.8
Blk-bellied Plover307118.0
Snowy Plover1361.7
Semipalmated Plover151513253813.2
Killdeer4248424.0
Black-necked Stilt40.7
Spotted Sandpiper133121.7
Willet44111.7
Whimbrel1653584.7
Marbled Godwit10483.7
Ruddy Turnstone5252115.7
Black Turnstone120.5
Surfbird30.5
Western Sandpiper1510121629.2
Least Sandpiper423025511.0
Boneparte’s Gull521.2
Heermann’s Gull3145311411.2
Ring-billed Gull844522014.7
Western Gull35851051608511297.0
California Gull6561084507525121.5
Glaucous-wingd Gull312131.7
Caspian Tern1341306125629.3
Forster’s Tern210.5
Royal Tern42131.7
Elegant Tern245700401265134199.3
Rock Pigeon64443125.5
Mourning Dove2264223.0
Anna’s Hummingbird2122211.7
Allen’s Hummingbird3432243.0
Black Phoebe610108477.5
American Crow4545544.5
Rough-wingd Swallow4310166108.2
Barn Swallow84210165.2
Cliff Swallow20424.3
Bushtit626243.3
Bewick’s Wren2110.7
Northern Mockingbird4122252.7
European Starling664444.0
Cedar Waxwing203.3
Yellow-rumpd Warbler241.0
Common Yellowthroat12632.0
Spotted Towhee1141.0
California Towhee320.8
Song Sparrow8612108159.8
Red-winged Blackbird21161.7
Great-tailed Grackle12852.7
Brwn-headed Cowbird12121.0
House Finch64610686.7
Lesser Goldfinch2120.8
Totals by Type27-Apr26-Apr25-Apr24-Apr22-Apr28-AprAve.
Waterfowl74373851656856
Water Birds-Other200138284820250160309
Herons, Egrets1381516131413
Raptors0203111
Shorebirds521097374633267
Gulls & Terns373844339743272297478
Doves961095149
Other Non-Pass.6554455
Passerines80539283607574
Totals Birds807120285618037336661011
200820092010201120122013
Total Species27-Apr26-Apr25-Apr24-Apr22-Apr28-AprAve.
Waterfowl4544654.7
Water Birds-Other127999109.3
Herons, Egrets4223443.2
Raptors0202111.0
Shorebirds111211612910.2
Gulls & Terns7999778.0
Doves3223222.3
Other Non-Pass.3222222.2
Passerines17151817151616.3
Totals Species61565755585657.2

No comments:

Post a Comment