Resources

Research & Monitoring

The CVJV’s Implementation Plan is a science-based blueprint for carrying out the mission of conserving migratory bird habitat in the Central Valley of California. With the goal of continually refining conservation objectives, the Joint Venture uses an iterative process of Conservation Planning, Implementation, and Monitoring and Evaluation.

Avian Disease in the Central Valley of California: A Survey of Trends 1980-2001 examines trends in avian botulism and avian cholera exploring potential relationships between recent habitat restoration efforts within the valley and waterfowl disease mortality.

Avian Monitoring on Private Lands. To document and assess the success of their efforts on private lands, the CVJV and partners have initiated the Avian Monitoring on Private Lands (AMPL) project in collaboration with PRBO Conservation Science (PRBO). AMPL is a cooperative effort, involving the California Department of Fish and Game’s Landowner Incentive Program and California Waterfowl Habitat Program, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s Partners for Fish and Wildlife Program, the Natural Resource Conservation Service’s Wetlands Reserve Program, PRBO, the Central Valley Joint Venture, and private landowners.

PRBO Works With Joint Venture on Private Lands (PDF)

PRBO has been contracted to conduct an initial three-year monitoring project to document the value of the various private lands habitat programs to migratory and resident bird populations in the Central Valley. The ultimate goal of this project is to provide science-based recommendations to help guide and improve future habitat efforts and investment of program resources on private lands.

Breeding Shorebird Survey. Little is known about shorebird status in the Central Valley in summer, a period when wetland habitat reaches its annual nadir and for which wetland loss has been even greater than at other seasons. To fill this important data gap, the CVJV helped support PRBO to coordinate counts of potentially breeding shorebirds at wetlands and other shallow-water habitats throughout the Central Valley in June 2003. Multiple federal, state, academic, and private partners were involved in the surveys.

In a final report submitted to the CVJV and in a paper currently being reviewed for publication, PRBO reports the patterns of geographic distribution, abundance, and broadscale habitat use of the Black-necked Stilt and American Avocet, the shorebird species most representative of these habitats in the Central Valley. PRBO also identifies threats to nesting shorebirds and makes recommendations for management and research needed to ensure the effective conservation of their populations and habitat in this region.

Discovery for Recovery: An International Pintail Recovery Initiative (The Pinsat Project) addresses the low population status of northern pintail ducks by seeking to understand relationships among regional waterfowl habitats and continental population demographics. You can follow the spring migration of individual pintails via satellite telemetry, as they leave their wintering grounds in the Central Valley of California, New Mexico, and Texas. Interactive maps, video clips, and close up photos bring this project to life.

Evaluating Moist-Soil Seed Production and Management in Central Valley Wetlands to Determine Habitat Needs for Waterfowl (1) evaluates the amount of food available in Central Valley wetlands; (2) investigates the influence of wetland management on seed production in wetlands; and (3) develops a new technique for monitoring wetland seed production.

The Pacific Flyway Project was the first ever attempt to establish baseline data on the abundance and distribution of shorebirds in wetland habitats along the Pacific Flyway from Alaska to Baja California. Data from the Pacific Flyway Project provide information critical to current shorebird conservation planning decisions, including the management of wetlands in the Central Valley.

Surveys of California's Central Valley between 1992-1995 document it as one of the most important regions in western North America to migratory and wintering shorebirds. Development of a sound conservation strategy is crucial for the preservation of shorebird populations in the Central Valley, as this agriculturally-dominated landscape is among the most altered in North America and remains vulnerable to strong economic and population growth pressures that may impact shorebird habitats in the future.

The Pintail Action Group is a cooperative group of public and private interests dedicated to the conservation of the northern pintail duck. The pintail, which was once one of the most common waterfowl species in North America, has declined over the past several decades due to changes in land-use practices.

The US Geological Survey, in partnership with the CVJV, has supported and benefited from extensive research including the following projects. For more information about individual researchers and their projects, visit http://www.usgs.gov/.

  • Fleskes, J.P., J.L. Yee, M.L. Casazza, M.R. Miller, J.Y. Takekawa, and D.L.Orthmeyer. 2005. Waterfowl distribution, movements, and habitat use relative to recent habitat changes in the Central Valley of California: A cooperative project to investigate impacts of the Central Valley Joint Venture and changing agricultural practices on the ecology of wintering waterfowl. Final Report. U.S. Geological Survey-Western Ecological Research Center, Dixon Field Station, Dixon, California. [Technical Report]
  • Fleskes, J.P., R. L. Jarvis, and D. S. Gilmer. 2002. Distribution and movements of female northern pintails radiotagged in San Joaquin Valley, California. Journal of Wildlife Management 66(1):138-152. [Journal Article]
  • Fleskes, J. P., R. L. Jarvis, D. S. Gilmer. 2002. September-March survival of female northern pintails radiotagged in San Joaquin Valley, California. Journal of Wildlife Management 66(3): 899-909. [Journal Article]
  • Miller, M. R., J. P. Fleskes, J. Y. Takekawa, D. L. Orthmeyer, M. L. Casazza, and W. M. Perry. 2001. Satellite tracking of northern pintail spring migration from California, USA: the route to Chukotka, Russia. Casarca 7: 229-233. [Journal Article]
  • Ackerman, J., J. Y. Takekawa, D. L. Orthmeyer, J. P. Fleskes, J. L Yee, and K. L. Kruse. In press. Spatial use by wintering greater white-fronted geese relative to a decade of habitat change in California's Central Valley. Journal of Wildlife Management XX:xxx-xxx. [Journal Article]
  • Ackerman, JT, JY Takekawa, DL Orthmeyer, JP Fleskes, JL Yee, and KL Kruse. 2005. Response of greater white-fronted geese to the Central Valley Joint Venture: changes in wintering ecology over a decade. 11th North American Arctic Goose Conference and Workshop, Reno, Nevada, January 5–8. [Poster]
  • Ackerman, JT, JY Takekawa, JP Fleskes, and DL Orthmeyer. 2005. White-fronted geese respond well to Joint Venture's habitat improvements. Valley Ventures, Spring 2005: 10-13. [Popular Publication]
  • Ackerman, JT, JY Takekawa, JP Fleskes, and DL Orthmeyer. 2005. Decade of change: a tracking study shows how white-fronted geese responded to recent habitat changes in the Central Valley. California Waterfowl, April/May 2005: 16-17 & 58. [Popular Publication]
  • Fleskes, J. P., D. S. Gilmer, and R. L. Jarvis. 2005. Pintail distribution and selection of marsh types at Mendota Wildlife Area during fall and winter. California Fish and Game 91(4): 270-285. [Journal Article]
  • Fleskes, J. P., W. M. Perry, K. L. Petrik, R. Spell, and F. Reid. 2005. Change in area of winter-flooded and dry rice in the northern Central Valley of California determined by satellite imagery. California Fish and Game 91(3): 207-215. [Journal Article]