“Desert Birds” Presented by Sylvia Gallagher

“Desert Birds”
Presented by Sylvia Gallagher
Sea and Sage Audubon Chapter
For PV/SB Audubon Society
Tuesday, May 19, 2015, 7:00 PM
Madrona Marsh Nature Center
For many people the word DESERT produces an image of desolate, barren sand--or
glorious carpets of spring wildflowers among towering green saguaros. Both images are
correct, but they are far from the whole picture. At this month's general meeting Sylvia
Gallagher will take you on a slide tour of the deserts of North America. She will address
such questions as: Why are the deserts located where they are? How many deserts are
there, and how do they differ from one another? What are some of the birds typical of
each desert, and how are they adapted to life in their severe environment? Her talk will
be illustrated with slides from the Sea and Sage Audubon Library of Nature Slides.
Greater Roadrunner, photo by Jess Morton
Our presenter, Sylvia Ranney Gallagher, attended Occidental College, Purdue
University, and earned a PhD from UCLA. She taught Chemistry for many years
including at Cal Poly, Pomona. She became interested in birds in 1968. Although she
has taken no formal course work in the subject, her interest has led her to read
extensively in books and periodicals and to attend many workshops and seminars.
Contact with other people knowledgeable about birds, as well as with the birds
themselves, has also contributed to her education.
Sylvia has held several positions in the Sea and Sage Audubon Society chapter,
including Director, and Christmas Bird Count Co-Chair, and currently serves as the Bird
Information Chair since 1984. Sylvia conducts beginning and advanced Birding Skills
Workshops for birders and biologists on visual and aural bird identification and
behavior. These workshops also cover the natural history of the areas where the birds
are found.
Sylvia is the Producer of Learning California Bird Sounds for beginning aural birders.
This set includes songs and calls of 64 common birds, self-study worksheets, and 325
practise sounds. The sounds were collected from the approximately 500 species she has
recorded in the field. Also available in the same series: Learning MORE California Bird
Sounds, Learning Western Mountain Bird Sounds. A completely revised Learning Desert
Bird Sounds is in production.
Sylvia is Co-Director, author and editor of the Atlas of Breeding Birds, Orange County.
With the field assistance of many birders, this project (1985-1990) mapped the
breeding location of all species in the county.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Light refreshments will be served. Everyone welcome! Come and enjoy the program,
socialize with friends, and fill out a ticket for the door prize drawing.
Prizes are donated by Wild Birds Unlimited in Torrance, courtesy of Bob Shanman.
http://www.torrance.wbu.com/
The Madrona Marsh Nature Center is located at 3201 Plaza del Amo, Torrance, CA,
90503: http://www.friendsofmadronamarsh.com/j/
You can find additional information about our programs and activities at our website:
http://pvsb-audubon.org/index.html
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Next Program: Dr. Peter Bloom, “Hawk Migration”, Madrona Marsh Nature Center,
June 16, 2015, 7:00 PM