Coastal Commission allows lab and cabins near murrelet habitat
In a battle between conservation groups, the Coastal Commission has permitted the Pescadero Conservation Alliance to renovate a lodge and cabins for up to 63 visitors a day near a marbled murrelet nesting area near Gazos Creek, says the County TImes.
Humans, and the food they bring with them, are known to attract predatory birds such as ravens and Steller’s jays, which steal murrelet eggs and kill their chicks, according to biologists.
It’s difficult to know precisely how many murrelets still exist in Northern California, according to Stacy Martinelli, a biologist with the California Department of Fish and Game. For many years, nobody knew where they nested; the first murrelet was spotted at Big Basin Redwoods State Park in 1974.
On one side was the PCA, the California Department of Fish and Game, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the California Department of Parks and Recreation. Coastal Commission staff supported the appeal [PDF of staff recommendation] by the Committee for Green Foothills [CGF article on the issue], the Center for Biological Diversity, Coastside Habitat Coalition, and coastside resident Jim Rourke. Lennie Roberts, of the CGF, predicts that at least one of the opposing groups will appeal the decision.
Click below to read PCA’s letter requesting support on April 3.