Me and the besties
Inspired by some pelicans i saw at the river and two of my best friends
[ID: a digital painting that shows three brown pelicans (Pelecanus occidentalis) perched in a white, wooden mast each. Two of them look at the camera while the one in the middle is opening their beak and stretching their wings. Behind them, the background shows green trees and a blue sky without clouds. End ID].
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Excerpt from this Smithsonian story:
Several hundred starving, sick or injured brown pelicans have turned up on beaches throughout California over the past few weeks, with wildlife officials still unable to pinpoint the cause of what they are calling a “crisis.”
The California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW), along with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) and other non-governmental partners, have been working to collect and rehabilitate the birds, many of which are anemic, dehydrated and underweight.
“They’re in really poor physical shape. They’re starving, and they haven’t gotten enough nutrition,” Russ Curtis, a spokesperson for the nonprofit organization International Bird Rescue, which is helping in the rescue efforts, tells KQED’s Annelise Finney.
“When there’s not the fishing stock that they can find, they take chances around fishing piers and fishing boats and places where there are people with fishing tackle,” Curtis says, explaining that some pelicans have been hurt by fishing hooks and lines they encounter near the shore.
As of this week, the Wetlands and Wildlife Care Center (WWCC) in Huntington Beach and Santa Barbara Wildlife Care Network have admitted more than 100 pelicans each, while International Bird Rescue has taken 260 pelicans into its two California facilities—one in Los Angeles County, and one in the San Francisco Bay Area, reports Cheri Carlson of the Ventura County Star.
Other birds have been found dead on beaches. Necropsies have revealed starvation as their cause of death, which has puzzled scientists. Populations of fish that pelican forage, by all accounts, remain abundant off the Pacific coast.
We also know that there’s supposedly plenty of anchovies and their food out there in the ocean, so we don’t really know why they are not able to forage yet,” Debbie McGuire, executive director of the Wetlands and Wildlife Care Center, tells Eugene Garcia of theAssociated Press.
Brown pelicans are known to spend their non-breeding months throughout the entirety of the state’s coastline, and the sick birds have been found in a variety of locations. In northern California, most birds have been rescued around Monterey and Santa Cruz, while those in southern California have been found by officials in a variety of traditional and non-traditional habitats. Two dozen pelicans were found on Newport Beach and dozens more were picked up around Huntington Beach—but sick birds have also been identified in a lake at SoFi stadium, the home of the NFL’s Los Angeles Rams, and at a Malibu fire station, the Guardian’sDani Anguiano reports.In rescue efforts, the first step is to support the birds with warmth. “The great news is the vast majority are recovering if we can get them through those first couple of critical hours of hypothermia,” Elizabeth Wood, the WWCC’s veterinarian and medical director, says in a video posted to Facebook.
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Brown Pelicans are Still Beautiful in the Fall
Fall Pelican
Even though I went to Cedar Key last week hoping to see the flamingos, I did also see quite a few other interesting animals and plants while out there, too. As I have said before, a day spent exploring Cedar Key and the surrounding area is never a disappointment. One of the many birds that I came across was this pretty brown pelican. Their breeding season is over now, and they are…
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@jayflemingphotography
Brown Pelicans gather by the thousands every spring to nest on the remote islets of the Smith Island, Maryland archipelago.
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Pelicans Landing...
Pelicans Landing…
When I want to watch brown pelicans fly, I go to the base of the Carmel River where these birds gather daily before gliding over the ocean for food. I took these photos yesterday.
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Wildlife in North Carolina. July 1977. Illustration by Duane Raver Jr.
Internet Archive
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Brown Pelicans Can Be a Beautiful and Interesting Subjects
Clowning
Last week I decided to go out to Cedar Key and do a little bird watching. I hadn’t been there since shortly after Hurricane Idalia came through and blew some migrating flamingos off course. I did get lucky enough to see the flamingos, but they were too far away to get good photographs with the camera and lenses I had at the time. Since then I’ve upgraded and although I knew the…
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