The San Francisco Conservation Committee works to create a better urban environment for our local bird life. Despite being heavily developed, San Francisco has incredible avian diversity and unique habitats that need our protection. We work with public agencies, partner organizations, and private developers to protect bird habitats and improve our city’s parks and infrastructure for wildlife.
Some of our current projects include:
- Advocating for Native Plants in parks, open spaces, and backyards.
- Fighting for protected spaces for Snowy Plovers and other ground dwelling shore birds at Crissy Field and Ocean Beach.
- Expanding Cats Indoors, Lights Out for Birds, and Bird Safe Buildings.
- Working with city and federal agencies to ensure wildlife areas are properly managed, and the city’s Biodiversity Resolution is followed.
- Restoring degraded wetlands along San Francisco’s southern waterfront, including Pier 94 and the Yosemite watershed.
- Working with communities along the southern waterfront to help create a park in the Bayview that incorporates wildlife habitat and recreational opportunities.
- Educating residents and agencies about the importance of wildlife in the city and how we can help protect it.
If you would like to become a member, learn more about what we do, or bring a project to our attention, please email the San Francisco Conservation Committee.
Do you like to spend time exploring the bay shoreline or hiking the East Bay hills? And do you appreciate watching the raptors, songbirds, and other wildlife you see in the East Bay wildlands and open spaces? If you do, join others who share your interests at the monthly meetings of the East Bay Conservation Committee.
You’ll also learn about the conservation issues affecting birds and other wildlife in the East Bay and how Golden Gate Bird Alliance is restoring parkland and protecting native species like the Golden Eagle and California Least Tern.
Golden Gate Bird Alliance’s East Bay Conservation Committee carries out a variety of habitat restoration and advocacy projects in western Alameda and Contra Costa counties. These projects include:
- Protecting and restoring bird habitats at Eastshore State Park
- Restoring the wetlands at Lake Merritt and Lake Merritt Channel
- Restoring a degraded wetland at Oakland’s Clinton Basin
- Working with the East Bay Regional Park District and other agencies to ensure that publicly owned wildlife areas are properly managed for wildlife as well as human recreation compatible with wildlife
- Protecting the Martin Luther King, Jr. Regional Shoreline Park and its restored wetlands from proposed development and other threats
- Advocating for protection of other key wildlife habitats in the East Bay
This fun and social committee meets on the second Tuesday of every other month (February, April, June, August, October, December) at 7 p.m. at the Golden Gate Bird Alliance office, 2530 San Pablo Avenue, Suite G, Berkeley. For more information, please email the East Bay Conservation Committee
The Friends of the Alameda Wildlife Reserve (FAWR) Committee, a conservation committee of Golden Gate Bird Alliance, works to create a better environment for our local wildlife throughout the City of Alameda.
Our volunteers:
- Work with the US Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) to preserve and enhance wildlife populations and their habitat at a critical breeding site for the California Least Tern on the former Alameda Naval Air Station and its surrounding land, which is now owned by the US Department of Veteran’s Affairs (the VA) under the name VA-Alameda Point. We call the site the Alameda Wildlife Reserve.
- Advocate before Alameda City elected officials and commissions, the Bay Conservation and Development Committee, the California Coastal Commission, and other agencies on proposed development projects, the creation of a new ecological park, a bird-safe buildings ordinance, and other matters of concern to the community. In our advocacy, we frequently partner with the Sierra Club and CASA (Community Action for a Sustainable Alameda).
- Monitor and provide public field trips to the 2023 Bald Eagle nesting territory on Bay Farm Island, with the support of Greenway Golf, which manages Corica Park, the location of the nest site.
- Monitor Peregrine Falcons, Osprey, Double-Crested Cormorants, Brown Pelicans, Great Blue Herons, Egrets and Harbor Seals at locations in Alameda.
- Provide education and outreach to both adults and children through our Alameda Sun and Alameda Post articles, presentations to adult groups, programs for children, and other opportunities.
- Support East Bay Regional Parks at their Return of the Terns event at Crab Cove and in doing habitat restoration at Encinal Beach, part of Crown Beach.
FAWR was founded with the primary purpose of protecting the California Least Terns and other wildlife by designating over 500 acres in the former Naval Air Station as a federal wildlife refuge. When this became unlikely, the land was transferred to the VA. In acquiring this unique parcel of land, the VA committed to overseeing the Reserve acreage as a conservation management area, presently managed in cooperation with the USFWS. FAWR continues to support the Reserve, its birds, and their habitat. The Reserve has become a refuge for a wide variety of birds and other wild creatures. We conduct twice-monthly bird surveys on the Reserve and provide volunteers for projects as needed by USFWS. We have conducted habitat restoration on the colony site and monitored the terns during nesting. The committee is dedicated to building public support for the Reserve and to ensuring the long-term survival of species that depend upon its habitat, including the endangered California Least Tern.
FAWR presently meets most months on the third Thursday of the month at 3:30 pm at Crab Cove. If you would like to become a member, learn more about what we do, or bring a project to our attention, please email the Friends of the Alameda Wildlife Refuge.