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On June 13, 1992, a downy gray chick was seen for the first time at the edge of the nest. It had been <br /> hatched at least a week before, but because all observations were made from a minimum of 100 yards <br /> away and from the cover of dense brush,detection of a chick could not be made until it was large enough <br /> to appear above the nest edge. By the end of June the single chick was fully feathered, and during the <br /> second week of July it and the two parent birds left the nest site. <br /> On May 31 a second nest was discovered in an isolated clump of oak trees near the site entrance(Figures <br /> 4.7-1, 4.7-9 and 4.7-13). A light brown female was sitting on the nest, indicating that eggs may be <br /> present. She was attended by a light brown male with a distinctive dark breast streak that also made <br /> ongoing identification of this pair possible. They occupied the nest site through the second week of June <br /> then it was deserted. During this two-week period the only observed disturbances were occasional <br /> vehicles coming onto the property and passing near the nest tree enroute to the lake areas. However,one <br /> or more disturbances may have occurred near the nest site between visits by the observation team to <br /> cause desertion of the nest. <br /> In addition to these two nesting pairs, four additional distinctly colored Swainson's hawks were seen on <br /> the project site during the survey period. On three occasions individuals were observed swooping to the <br /> ground after what was assumed to be rodent prey, but no kill was ever documented. Specimens were <br /> also seen flying to and from the site and the adjacent irrigated pasture areas where it was assumed they <br /> were also foraging. <br /> The most abundant raptor observed was the red-tailed hawk (Buteo jamaicensis). This is the only <br /> permanent resident soaring-type(buteo)hawk, and at least six individual specimens were seen on each <br /> visit to the site. Other raptors viewed one or more times were the northern harrier (Circus cyaneus), <br /> black-shouldered kite (Elanus caeruleus), Cooper's hawk (Accipiter cooperii), American kestral (Falco <br /> sparverius), great horned owl (Bubo virginianus), barn owl (7yto alba), and turkey vulture (Cathartes <br /> aura). The latter is in especially high numbers on the site which was once acclaimed to support the <br /> largest nesting colony of these birds in North America. <br /> Mammals <br /> The most conspicuous native mammal on the site is the black-tailed deer (Odocoileus hemionus <br /> columbianus)which relies mainly on several brush species, including poison oak, for its main browse <br /> or woody plant food. In this area it is in partial competition with cattle which range freely throughout <br /> the riparian woodland and browse heavily on green brush species in the fall after all the green grass has <br /> dried. <br /> The black-tailed hare (Lepus californicus)was the most frequently observed native mammal on the site. <br /> On two occasions freshly killed specimens were found that had been shot. <br /> Random portions of the grassland, oak savanna, and seasonal wetland areas contain numerous signs <br /> (burrows, runways, etc.) of rodents such as the California meadow vole (Microtis californicus), Botta's <br /> pocket gopher (7homomys bonae), and in sparsely vegetated areas, the California ground squirrel <br /> (Spermophilus beecheyi). With the exception of the latter, most of the small rodent signs were observed <br /> on grassland/woodland edge areas where heavy grazing and trampling by cattle had not occurred. <br /> 17 <br />