
![]() ANNA'S HUMMINGBIRD at Tobacco Flower. (November 2008) This
particular variety of
tobacco is not native to California (although a plant used by the
Indians as tobacco is also present on Panorama Vista Preserve.)
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![]() ANNA'S HUMMINGBIRD. (June 2008) Notice the Hummingbird's tongue
in the close-up. Hummingbirds eat insects they
find in spiderwebs and also take spider silk to use in their
nests.
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![]() The Ash-throated Flycatcher catches insects in the air but also forages on the ground. It is a migratory bird whose winter grounds are along the Caribbean and Pacific coasts of Mexico and Central America. |
![]() BELTED KINGFISHER (Oct. 2008) Migratory. Dives after
fish and other aquatic creatures.
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![]() BLACK PHOEBE (May 2008) |
![]() (February 2010)
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![]() (February 2010)
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| The Black
Phoebe is a flycatcher which likes to be near water; it
requires mud for its nests which it builds in tree cavities, dirt
banks, boulders and rock faces. It often reuses the same nest site from year to year. |
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June 2008 (Female)
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(Male)BLACK-HEADED GROSBEAK Perching Songbird, migratory from Mexico Eats weed seeds, insects, spiders, and fruit. |
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(late
February 2010) |
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| BLUE-GRAY GNATCATCHER Migratory; wintering grounds include the lower Colorado River, the Pacific coast of Mexico, and northern Central America. |
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![]() BUFFLEHEADS (January 2009) This pair of
little ducks has mated for life. They find the small size of
cavities made by Northern Flickers just the right size for their
nests; nest boxes are an acceptable alternative. They dive
for insect
laravae, crustaceans , shellfish, and snails.
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![]() BULLOCK'S ORIOLE (May 2008) © Bill Lydecker |
The riparian sycamore-
willow-cottonwood habitat on the Panorama Vista Preserve attracts the Bullock's Oriole. Its nesting season in California occurs between March and June. Migratory from Mexico. |
![]() BULLOCK'S ORIOLE (First year male) (June 2008) Young males are a lighter
yellow than the older
bird seen in the photo above.
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![]() Bullock's Orioles eat insects,
spiders and fruit such as these ripe
elderberries.
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CACKLING GOOSE (far right) and two Canada Geese on a sandbar on the Kern River. (Oct. 2009) |
![]() CACKLING
GOOSE (middle
foreground) and a GREATER WHITE-FRONTED GOOSE (left
background) along with three Canada
Geese
(Oct.
2009)
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![]() CALIFORNIA QUAIL California's state bird struts his stuff. California quail require a brushy
habitat where it forages for seeds
and other plant matter. (January 2009)
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![]() Covey of California Quail. The female in the foreground has
a
gray face and a smaller topknot than the males; she also lacks
the males' smudged brown belly spot. (January 2009)
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![]() CALIFORNIA THRASHER (May 2008) The
California
Thrasher uses its curved bill to dig through leaf litter (in a
thrashing motion) for
insects, spiders, caterpillars, etc. It also eats elderberries
and other fruits.
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![]() Two CANADA GEESE The one on the left is partially leucistic, i.e. the pigment on its head is white; compare it to the goose on the right. |
![]() Close-up view clearly showing the whitish head of the leucistic goose. (July 2008) |
| Canada Geese are
migratory on the Preserve. The leucistic goose above appears (in
July 2008) appears to have returned to the Preserve in August 2009: |
![]() Canada geese form life-long relationships so most likely this is the same pair seen above. |
![]() These two geese were observed in the compary of five other Canada Geese; last year there the group also numbered a total of seven. |


![]() This female COMMON MERGANSER is in
the process of downing a freshly caught catfish.
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| The Common Merganser is a large
duck which finds its food (fish, small clams and crustaceans, insects,
etc.) by sorting through the sediment or rocks of the river
bottom or by cruising along with its head underwater looking for
prey. Sometimes called a sawbilll, the serrations on its bill
prevent the prey from slipping away. Southern California is part
of its winter range. The Common Merganser prefers fresh
water and is an indicator species for waterway contamination by
pesticides and industrial wastes. Luckily, there are few large
farms and no industries upstream from the Preserve. |
![]() EARED GREBE |
![]() EUROPEAN
STARLING
(October
2008)
In 1890, one
hundred European Starlings were introduced into New
York
City's Central Park as a misguided tribute to William Shakespeare
because he mentioned the species in one of his works.
Starlings now number in the hundreds of millions and have spread throughout the United States. They have become a major pest in many areas and are a special threat to cavity-nesting native bird species such as the Northern Flickers, Tree Swallows, Wood Ducks and Hairy Woodpeckers, all of which have been observed on the Preserve. |
![]() GOLDEN-CROWNED
SPARROW
(Feb.
2010)
Breeds in Alaska, the Yukon and British Columbia but winters in Washington, Oregon, and California into Baja California Norte and up the Colorado River. |
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From its
perch the Great Horned Owl spots its prey and suddenly
pounces. It may also walk on the ground, not very
gracefully, in pursuit of small game.
It eats a wide variety of game such as rabbits, hares,
squirrels, waterfowl, and lizards and other reptiles.
|
![]() GREATER YELLOWLEGS (October 2008) A
migratory wading bird, it feeds on
fish and invertebrates. Its breeding grounds are in Canada and it
winters in southernmost California, Mexico, Central America, and the
Caribbean.
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![]() GREEN HERON (August 2008) The dark
green brownish coloration, shy ways and preference for thick vegetation
make this bird hard to spot. It fishes close to bank's edge, as
here, but also goes into deeper water to plunge after fish to grab or
stab. The clever Green Heron is known to draw fish to it by
throwing bait or a lure into the water: bits of twig or leaves,
berries, feathers, and insects. Other herons do not
use tools in this manner.
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![]() HAIRY WOODPECKER (May 2008) The red
splash on the back of the head is a distinguishing mark of this
handsome little woodpecker along with large whitish spots on its
dark wings. It is known as a very nimble climber.
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![]() HOUSE WREN (October 2008) You may have
seen this bird in your own back yard; it
loves shrubby areas in residential areas but is also found in wilder areas such as the Preserve. |
![]() KESTREL with newly caught lizard, (May 2008) |
This is the AMERICAN KESTREL,
the only kestrel species native to the
North American continent.
The reddish tail is typical of both males and females. The kestrel is a falcon who hunts small vertebrates, such as this lizard, and insects on the ground; it hovers and then pounces on its prey. While on the wing it may also go after flying insects or small birds. |
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![]() KILLDEER (June 2008) |
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The killdeer is a migratory
bird who likes to be near water and to nest
on gravel or sand. It eats
small fish, crayfish and other
aquatic life, seeds, worms, and insects. It is a species of
plover.
These fuzzy chicks have a single dark band across the chest but when grown will sport a double band of dark stripes; this marking distinguishes the killdeer from other plover species. |
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![]() MALLARD female and ducklings (June 2008) This is the
most abundant of duck species in North America. It
nests near water but on the ground in or under protective
vegetation.
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![]() (August 2009) The mallard is one of those creatures who can sleep with one eye closed and the other peeping open, simultaneously asleep and wakeful, two brain hemispheres working independently. |
![]() The bright blue patch on the mallards' wings show up very clearly. |
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![]() NORTHERN FLICKER, red-shafted. (October 2008) The
number of Northern
Flickers has been declining nationally, possibly due to habitat
decline and competition for nest cavities with European Starlings
(whose numbers are on a sharp increase; see above entry for
European Starlings). This is unfortunate because other bird
species make secondary use of pre-existing flicker nest cavities but
starlings will aggressively push them out; included on this list
are Wood Ducks, Buffleheads, other woodpeckers, Tree Swallows, and some
owls.
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![]() NORTHERN MOCKINGBIRD (January 2009) This bird is common in the urban
Bakersfield area and, in fact, is
found all over the US, throughout Mexico, and in the Caribbean.
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![]() (October 2008) The
mockingbird is known not only for its large song repertoire but
also its ferocity in defending its territory. The back yard
birder has seen many a cat reduced to cringing misery by the dive-bomb
tactics of an
irritable mockingbird.
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![]() NUTTALL'S WOODPECKER &
RED-WINGED BLACKBIRD
(June 2008)
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NUTTALL'S WOODPECKER (Male) (Feb. 2010) |
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| The range of the Nuttall's Woodpecker stretches from northern California into northern Baja California Norte. It is usually found in oak woodlands but may also be found in riparian sycamore-cottonwood areas, as here on the Preserve. In fact, it is more likely found in riparian zones the farther south in its range it is observed. It probes and softly taps branches in search of insects, caterpillars, etc. |
![]() ORANGE-CROWNED WARBLER (January 2009) Migratory; some of these warblers migrate in winter from Canada, some from only as far away as the Pacific Coast. |
![]() OSPREY (April 2009) Fish tops
the menu for the osprey and is in fact the only item on
it. The osprey catches its prey by diving feet first into the
water; like other raptors, it has a formidable set of
sharp, curved talons with which to seize its quarry.
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![]() PHAINOPEPLA in an Elderberry Bush. (October 2008) The
range
of the
Phainopepla is from the San Joaquin Valley into Arizona, Central
Mexico, and Baja California.
|
Pair of Phainopeplas, the
female at the top left, the male
at the lower right. (October 2008) |
![]() The male
Phainopepla is black. The large white patches under his
wings show as this bird is taking off after an insect.
Phainopeplas eat berries (e.g. elderberries) and flying
insects.
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![]() The female is gray; the crest on her head shows up clearly in this profile. She is perched on a dry elderberry branch. (Oct. 2009) |
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RED-TAILED HAWK Red-tailed Hawks soaring above the Preserve are a common sight; they take advantage of thermal air currents that spiral outward from the face of the Panorama Bluffs. |
![]() RED-TAILED HAWK on Nest, April 12, 2008. Red-tailed
Hawks often
reuse the same nesting site over several years. This place was
used for at least two consecutive years.
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![]() Same Nest One Month Later, With Two Chicks Trees are
good for nesting but a
powerline tower is a perfectly acceptable alternative.
|
![]() Another month later (June 2008) |
![]() These young hawks were spotted across the canal from the powerline nest. They were making what the photographer took to be "feed-me" sounds. |
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RED-WINGED BLACKBIRD
Male. (June 2008)
The range of
the Red-Winged Blackbird runs from northern Canada and
through the United States and Mexico to the Guatemalan border; it
is very numerous. It forages in a wide variety of habitats
although riparian areas are common. It eats weed seeds but its
strong liking for grain fields makes it much disliked by farmers.
The Red-Winged Blackbird should not be confused with the endangered Tricolor Blackbird whose red wing patch is smaller and is edged with white or cream color rather than yellow. |
![]() ROCK WREN (October 2008) The Rock
Wren is usually found in dry areas with exposed rocky areas
such as cliffs or bluffs, gravel washes, and boulders. It
lives on insects.
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![]() ROSE-RINGED PARAKEETS (October 2008) Non-Native species.
Flocks of Rose-ringed Parakeets are a common
sight in the
Bakersfield-Kern River area-- on the Preserve and in Bakersfield
neighborhoods.
|
![]() They are said to have escaped
or been let loose from a local aviary in the 1970s during a large wind
storm.
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![]() SAY'S PHOEBE (October 2008) A
flycatcher, it lives primarily on insects and gets the water its body
needs from the insects. Unlike the Black Phoebe, it does not
usually use mud in its nests.
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SCRUB JAY (October 2008) The Western
Scrub Jay is dull blue in color with white
"eyebrows" and does not have a head crest . Food resources
available to jays on the Preserve include insects, spiders, and
elderberry; acorns would have been on that list in the era when
oak trees grew on the Preserve. Since they like to cache food for
later consumption, jays would have played an important role in
oak dispersal although their ability to remember cache sites is so good
that probably most acorns were eventually retrieved and eaten.
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![]() SPOTTED SANDPIPER, well camouflaged. (June 2008) This species
of sandpiper winters in fresh water habitats of coastal
California and the Central Valley (as well as Mexico and the
Caribbean.) It arrives from the north in fall. Here on the
Preserve it searches for freshwater invertebrates along the shores of
the river, its inlets, and canals.
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![]() TREE SWALLOW (JUVENILE) (May 2008) Prefers
habitats near water; it nests in standing dead trees with
cavities perhaps originally made by the Northern Flicker. Nest
boxes are an acceptable alternative.
|
![]() TURKEY VULTURE (October 2008) The turkey
vulture regularly migrates through Kern County in the fall. This
photo clearly shows it characteristic bald red head and impressive
wings which can span six feet.
In the past, people have feared it as a predator that goes after livestock and small animals. In reality, it is only a scavenger whose keen sense of smell leads it to carcasses of already dead animals, ranging in size from dead tadpoles to cows. It is not a picky eater. It makes a hissing sound that would make Darth Vader sit up and take notice, but in nature the turkey vulture provides valuable sanitary engineering service. |
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![]() WESTERN KINGBIRD (June 2008) Breeding
season for the Western Kingbird extends over the trans-Mississippi
West, but in winter it migrates to the California, Pacific coast of
Mexico and Central
America and southern Florida. It lives primarily on insects but
may also feed on elderberry fruit.
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![]() WESTERN KINGBIRD ON NEST (April 2009) The female
builds her nest with various plant fibers, grasses, twigs,
cottonwood bark and fuzz, and man-made found objects; here some
kind of green string or tape has been incorporated into the nest.
This could be a hazard to nestlings who might tangle their feet up in
it.
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![]() WHITE-CROWNED SPARROW (October 2008) This
songbird's winter territory includes interior California.
Back yard birders often see groups of these swallows flocking around
their feeders.
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![]() WOOD DUCK (April 2008) The wood
duck population was on the decline in the U.S. until passage of the
Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918. It has had to struggle with
loss of habitat however. It nests in tree cavities made by
woodpeckers but will also use nest boxes. Several boxes have been
installed on the Preserve.
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![]() YELLOW-RUMPED WARBLER (December 2008) The warbler has a dried elderberry in its bill. In winter it migrates to the southern U.S. from northeastern portions of the country and Canada. |


