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Riparian and Madrean Pine-Oak Avian Monitoring at Habitat Restoration Sites, Villa Verde and Los Campitos, Sonora, Mexico

Friday, 14 May 2004 by Jennie Duberstein

Project Description This project continues and expands bird monitoring efforts at the Villa Verde and Los Campitos drainages, both in the Sonoran Upper San Pedro Watershed. This project is three-fold in scope. First, funds will be used for outreach efforts to landowners to extend bird monitoring efforts to newly identified critical habitat sites. This will

  • Published in Awards Program
Tagged under: 2004, Mexico, monitoring, outreach, restoration, Rio San Pedro, San Pedro River, Sonora

Management plan to increase reproductive success of Endangered Snowy Plovers and Least Terns in Ceuta Bay, Mexico

Friday, 14 May 2004 by Jennie Duberstein

Project Description Ceuta Bay is one of the most important sites for the conservation of resident, migratory, and breeding birds in the state of Sinaloa. Pronatura has undertaken studies in the area regarding the reproductive success of two colonies of endangered species: Snowy Plover (Charadrius alexandrinus) and Least Tern (Sterna antillarum). Reproductive success in the

  • Published in Awards Program
Tagged under: 2004, Mexico, monitoring, Sinaloa, snowy plover

Community participation in bird conservation in Bahía de Los Angeles, Baja California, Mexico

Friday, 14 May 2004 by Jennie Duberstein

Project Description Pronatura Noroeste received support from the Sonoran Joint Venture to promote the involvement of the local community in bird conservation and monitoring activities in Bahía de Los Angeles, Baja California, Mexico (BLA). The BLA region is used as a breeding, roosting, and feeding ground by large numbers of seabirds and wading birds. The

  • Published in Awards Program
Tagged under: 2004, Baja California, ecotourism, Mexico, monitoring, training

Implementation of the Bird Conservation Plan for the Colorado River Delta: outreach and monitoring

Friday, 14 May 2004 by Jennie Duberstein

Project Description The Colorado River delta is one of the most important areas for bird conservation in the Sonoran Desert. The delta supports more than 150,000 migratory waterbirds, is a critical stopover site for over 100 species of Neotropical migratory landbirds, and provides habitat for endangered species such as Yuma Clapper Rail and California Black

  • Published in Awards Program
Tagged under: 2004, Baja California, Colorado River delta, Mexico, monitoring, outreach, Sonora

Habitat enhancement for endangered rails at the Ciénega de Santa Clara, Sonora, Mexico

Friday, 14 May 2004 by Jennie Duberstein

Project Description The Ciénega de Santa Clara is the largest marsh wetland in the Sonoran Desert, extending over 5,800 hectares. It supports nearly 75% of the total population of the Yuma Clapper Rail, an endemic marshbird of the Lower Colorado River and its delta that is protected as Endangered in the United States and Threatened

  • Published in Awards Program
Tagged under: 2004, Baja California, Mexico, monitoring, restoration, Sonora

Seri Indian community’s Proyecto Zilcaalc for migratory waterfowl habitat conservation at Mexico’s northernmost Pacific mangrove habitat

Friday, 14 May 2004 by Jennie Duberstein

Project Description This project involves an indigenous coastal community in habitat conservation and migratory waterfowl monitoring at the northernmost Pacific mangrove habitat in Mexico. The Seri Indians, or Comcáac, are the last hunting, gathering, and fishing culture in the arid regions of North America to retain their native language, traditional ecological knowledge base, and non-agricultural

  • Published in Awards Program
Tagged under: 2004, Mexico, monitoring, Sonora, training

Monitoring breeding colonies and post-breeding movements of terns and skimmers in coastal northwestern Mexico and southern California

Friday, 14 May 2004 by Jennie Duberstein

Project Description This project will monitor the populations of terns and skimmers breeding at selected locations in coastal northwestern Mexico and southern California. It focuses on three species that commonly co-occur and establish significant breeding colonies in the region: Gull-billed Tern (Sterna nilotica), Royal Tern (Sterna maxima), and Black Skimmer (Rynchops niger). Gull-billed tern and

  • Published in Awards Program
Tagged under: 2004, Mexico, monitoring, training, U.S.

Pesticide effects on migratory landbirds of Sinaloa and Sonora, Mexico

Friday, 14 May 2004 by Jennie Duberstein

Project Description Migratory landbirds are exposed to a variety of threats on their wintering, breeding, and migratory stopover habitats. Pollution is one of the least known threats due to the difficulty in measuring its effects on birds. In this project CIAD will use a methodology specifically designed to measure the impacts of organophosphate and carbamate

  • Published in Awards Program
Tagged under: 2004, agriculture, Colorado River delta, Mexico, Sinaloa, Sonora

Habitat protection of a long-term study site in the tropical deciduous forest of Sonora, Mexico

Wednesday, 14 May 2003 by Jennie Duberstein

Project Description Presently not much is known about the structure, dynamics, and fauna of the tropical deciduous forest. Relatively easy access and recent botanical surveys of the tropical deciduous forest around Alamos, Sonora provide an opportunity to consolidate ecological knowledge and cultivate interest among scientists and naturalists. In addition, the recovery from disturbance and response

  • Published in Awards Program
Tagged under: 2003, Alamos, Mexico, monitoring, Sonora

Avian Monitoring in the Colorado River delta, Mexico

Wednesday, 14 May 2003 by Jennie Duberstein

Project Description The Colorado River delta supports over 300,000 wintering waterbirds and is a critical stopover site for over 100 species of Neotropical migratory landbirds. This wetland system also provides habitat for significant populations of endangered species, such as the Yuma Clapper Rail and the California Black Rail. The goal of this project is to

  • Published in Awards Program
Tagged under: 2003, Baja California, Colorado River delta, Mexico, monitoring, Sonora
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About Us

The Sonoran Joint Venture is a partnership of diverse organizations and individuals from throughout the southwestern United States and northwestern Mexico that share a common commitment to the conservation of all bird species and habitats within this range.

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Sonoran Joint Venture
520 N. Park Avenue
Tucson, AZ 85719

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