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About the Corridor: Research: Bird Studies
Scott, T. and D. Cooper. 1999.
Avifauna Study of the Puente-Chino Hills Corridor. (1.1 MB)
During spring and summer of 1997 and 1998, Scott & Cooper conducted a
distribution survey of birds and associated habitats of the Puente-Chino Hills
for the Mountains Recreation and Conservation Authority. From over 300
stationary points and nearly 50 walking transects, they recorded evidence of
breeding for nearly 100 bird species, including such localized and declining
taxa as Northern Harrier, Golden Eagle, Prairie Falcon, White tailed Kite,
Cactus Wren, Least Bell's Vireo, Loggerhead Shrike, Homed Lark, California
Gnatcatcher, Yellow Warbler, Yellow breasted Chat, Grasshopper, Bell's Sage and
Rufous crowned sparrows, and Tricolored Blackbird (see Appendix B for Latin
names). The researchers documented widespread nesting of Say's Phoebe, a species
recently rediscovered as breeding in Southwestern California (see Gallagher
1997). The surveys essentially confirm the recent extirpation of Burrowing Owl
in the region, a species common in the early 1980s (D. Cooper, pers. obs.) last
recorded in 1993 (C. Schlotterbeck, pers. comm.).
The exotic and semi-native grasslands of the Puente-Chino Hills may represent
their greatest contribution to the breeding bird community of coastal Southern
California, as so much of this habitat has been permanently lost to
urbanization. Species restricted to grasslands were probably the most restricted
in distribution, occurring in three main areas, the Shell Property east to Brea
Canyon/57 Freeway, Upper Tonner Canyon (vic. of San Bernardino/Los Angeles Co.
line), and in and around Chino Hills State Park. Grasslands in the western
portion of the study area were generally lacking several species, as were
smaller patches and many of those isolated by development. Land purchases that
augment these regions (i.e. vic. Shell property, land south of Los Serranos)
would maximize protection for species like Grasshopper Sparrow, whose breeding
populations have been drastically reduced in Southern California. Unlike
woodland and chaparral species which are widespread in appropriate habitats
throughout the study area, several grassland species, particularly wide ranging
raptors, were mainly confined to the largest expanses of grassland in San
Bernardino County.
The most extensive and least disturbed examples of another important habitat,
Coastal Sage Scrub (CSS), was found along the southern Rank of the Puente and
Chino Hills, mainly in and adjacent to oil property land in northeast Brea and
northwestern Yorba Linda. One of the most "significant" bird species of the
study area, Federally Threatened California Gnatcatcher, is essentially
restricted to this area, absent from less extensive Coastal Sage Scrub in nearby
Chino Hills State Park. Other CSS species, including Cactus Wren and Rufous
crowned Sparrow, were found scattered throughout the study area from Yorba Linda
to Whittier, including in the case of the wren, narrow portions of the Corridor
and in isolated patches of habitat on the urban edge.
Riparian species were largely confined to wooded drainages within Chino Hills
State Park, Tonner Canyon, Carbon Canyon Regional Park, and the Santa Ana River
from Prado Dam west through Featherly Regional Park. Least Bell's Vireo, a
Federally Endangered species, was found primarily along the Santa Ana River in
Riverside County and in Carbon Canyon Regional Park. Other riparian obligate
species were found to be widespread but patchily distributed, occasionally
persisting in small, isolated willow thickets not overrun by exotic species
(e.g. Sycamore Canyon, Whittier).
Woodland species were found to be most diverse in the north central portion of
the study area, from the northern flank of the hills in Rowland Heights east to
Diamond Bar. Though it was not surveyed, the former Firestone Boy Scout
Reservation may protect the least disturbed and most extensive examples of oak
and oak-walnut woodland in the study area. Since the woodland species of the
Puente-Chino Hills are generally widespread in the mountains of Southern
California, their preservation in the lowlands is primarily of local, rather
than regional, conservation importance. Similarly, most of the chaparral
restricted birds are not only common and widespread within the study area, but
also in the San Gabriel and Santa Ana Mountains to the north and south. This is
in contrast to species dependent upon Coastal Sage Scrub and extensive
grasslands, many of which occur exclusively in cismontane lowlands.
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