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Articles

Vol. 51 No. 2 (2020)

TEMPORAL RESPONSE OF CALIFORNIA BLACK RAILS TO TIDAL WETLAND RESTORATION

DOI:
https://doi.org/10.21199/WB51.2.4
Submitted
September 14, 2025
Published
April 1, 2020

Abstract

 From the mid-1800s into the 1960s, many tidal wetlands along the coast of California were isolated from tidal inflence and converted to farmland. since 1976, to restore ecological function and hydrological integrity, tidal inflence has been restored to some of these wetlands. My collaborators and I monitored three sites—one on the north edge of san Pablo Bay, one on the west side of san Francisco Bay, and one at the south end oftomales Bay—to document occupancy by the California Black Rail (Laterallus jamaicensis coturniculus), a cryptic marsh bird with an extremely narrow habitat niche in emergent tidal wetlands and considered an indicator of tidal-marsh health and restoration success. A source of prospective
colonists had persisted adjacent to all three sites. Black Rails occupied each site within three to ten years, demonstrating the value of these restorations.

References