
Partnerships Between Dairy Farmers and Conservationists Save 60,000 Rare Tricolored Blackbirds
See images & hear Tricolored Blackbirds at YouTube
Media Contacts:
Anita Brown (530) 792-5644
Daniela Ogden (510) 601-1866, ex. 231

These 3-day old Tricolored Blackbird chicks (above) were successfully raised in a dairy farmer’s field in the San Joaquin Valley. (Photo: Cathy Henry)
DAVIS, Calif., July 10, 2012—The USDA's Natural Resources Conservation
Service (NRCS) and Audubon California have released final 2012 results on the status of the rare Tricolored
Blackbird, a California Bird Species of Special Concern, found in California’s Central Valley. Results show the species is having a
good year, thanks in large part to four farmers who have agreed to partner with the conservation agencies. Together the farmers and
biologists protected 60,000 breeding birds – one-fifth of the species’ entire global population – after farmers agreed to delay their
harvest schedule and allow the birds to fledge safely.
"I have never seen so many Tricolored Blackbirds as I have this year," said Rick Gorzeman, a dairy farmer in Tulare County. "At
first we didn’t know what to do but then I heard of a sign up program with the NRCS. This allowed me to let my wheat grow in the
field longer while the birds’ eggs hatched.” The program Gorzeman is referring to, the Environmental Quality Incentives Program
(EQIP), provided technical and financial assistance to the four farmers from Kern, Merced and Tulare counties who
participated in saving the birds. All birds successfully fledged in late May.
Keiller Kyle, a Tricolored Blackbird expert with Audubon California, monitors the rare birds' location patterns and development
stages in areas throughout the Central Valley. With Kyle’s expertise and the help of NRCS biologist, Jesse Bahm, conservationists
were able to target their efforts and develop the right harvesting schedule to protect the birds and worked with the farmers to
assess the impact a harvest delay would have on crop quality and quantity.
"We are pleased that these farmers are willing to help protect this native California bird, and a lot of that has to do with
reaching out to them with a strategy that considered the needs of both the birds and the farmers. NRCS is a crucial partner for
outreach and funding that makes this program successful," said Kyle. "This is a powerful partnership of private landowners,
nonprofit conservation organizations, and public agencies working to protect a unique species in a working landscape."

Over 60,000 adults, like these above, were given a chance to breed this year as a result of the NRCS Tricolored Blackbird Habitat Initiative. (Photo: Cathy Henry)
Every spring, Tricolored Blackbirds build large colonies of nests in the Central Valley’s marshy areas and also in areas that
were historically marshland but are now cropland. The birds have adapted to the change in vegetation and now over 40 percent of the
birds build their nests in silage fields such as triticale and wheat. Unfortunately, the nesting schedule of the species conflicts
with the harvesting schedule of the farmers. The species is now federally listed as a Bird of Conservation Concern, a California
Bird Species of Special Concern, and are also protected under the provisions of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act.
Farmers with nesting Tricolored Blackbirds can help the species by delaying their harvesting until the birds are fully fledged.
However, this also delays summer planting, can disrupt the equipment and labor schedules the farmers have negotiated in advance, and
also results in a loss of quality to the silage fields hosting the birds. The voluntary steps taken by these four farmers ensured
that the birds were protected and fully fledged. "We found that when farmers understood the situation they wanted to do what they
could to help the birds," says Jennifer Cavanaugh, Wetlands Biologist with NRCS. "It was really satisfying to work with the farmers
and Audubon California to find a win-win plan for helping wildlife while allowing farmers to continue to provide feed for their
livestock."
"The people from NRCS and Audubon CA came out after I was accepted into their program and explained everything to me," said
Gorzeman. "They compensated me for the extra irrigation I put on my wheat and for the tonnage lost on my summer crop. They were very
helpful and friendly and we were able to protect the birds," he said.
More information is available at www.ca.audubon.org and at
www.ca.nrcs.usda.gov.
Also see images and hear
Tricolored Blackbirds at YouTube.
NRCS has provided leadership in a partnership effort to help America's private land owners and managers conserve their soil,
water and other natural resources since 1935. For more information on NRCS, visit www.nrcs.usda.gov.
-NRCS-
The Natural Resources Conservation Service provides leadership in a partnership effort to help people
conserve, maintain, and improve our natural resources and environment.
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