Image from the Biodiversity Heritage Library.
Contributed by Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, Berkeley.
| www.biodiversitylibrary.org
Transcription
1941
32
We found 28 sp. in this one place: Quail, Mourning Dove,
Bunzard, Anna's H., Flycher, Black Phoebe, W. Wood Pewee
W. Flycatcher, Ash-thr Flycatcher, Vg. Swallows, Roughing.Sw.
Crow, Bynah.tl, House Wren, Mt. Thrush (seen, not heard),
W. Bluebird, Robin,
Winkling Vires, Cassin Vires, Lutescent Warbler, Yellow Warbler,
Chat, Redwing Br., Meadowlark, B. Oriole, Black Phoebe,
Bbl. Grosbeak, Sunlet, Mt. Goldfinch, Spotted Towhee,
Rv. Towhee, Song Sparrow.
Between this and Stags Leap we found an
Anthony Green Heron, Western Kingbirds, Calif. Jay
Sparrow Hards, Calif. Woodpecker, Cliff Swallows,
Dark Sparrows. And at Stag's Leap the Lawrence
Goldfinch, Western Tanager, Audubon Tanager.
Cedar Waxwings. (On the way back); Cooper Hawk,
Western Gulls, Bonaparte Gulls, Calif. (or Phoeb.) Gulls.
Shrike, Clodder--
48 sp. to here.
When we reached Berkeley we stopped at the
Aquatic Park where we saw many Bonaparte
Gulls, 8-10 Foster Terns, 1 Least Tern,
6 Bluebills, 6-8 (brown) Golden-eyes, 2 Mergansers,
1 Eared Grebe (black neck but no ear tufts; flaming
eye), 1 female Mallard Duck, a few M. Phalaropes,
1 Farallone Cormorant, several Sandpipers, 26 sp.,
Nuttall Sparrow
The Cedar Waxwings at Stags Leap were eating
Cherries. No call notes were heard. There were
at least three pairs of Dark Sparrows in
the orchard and several pairs of Lawrence
Goldfinches. In a magnolia tree just below
the terrace at the entrance of the main
building a female Mt. Goldfinch was sitting on
a nest built at the tip of a low branch. A