California
Clapper Rail

Mike Boyland/FWS

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The California clapper rail is a small, secretive salt marsh bird.
© PeterLaTourrette/
birdphotography.com

The California clapper rail is a secretive hen-like salt marsh bird. An endangered subspecies of the clapper rail, which is still common in the East, the California clapper rail suffered from unsustainable hunting during the Gold Rush days and, more recently, severe habitat decline in its coastal habitat. An estimated 1,000 California clapper rails survive, mostly in the salt marshes of the San Francisco Bay area.

Gray-brown above with a buffy-cinnamon chest, the California clapper rail has a long, slightly down-turned bill and an upturned tail with a white patch underneath. It grows to a length of about 13 to 19 inches.

The clapper rail can move quickly through its marshy habitat, prefering to walk or run and take cover rather than fly away when frightened or bothered. Although this furtive bird is hard to spot, its unmistakable, clattering call often gives it away.

California clapper rails probe the mud with their long beaks to find worms and small invertebrates.   Clapper rails can move quickly through marshes and will take cover when frightened or bothered.
© PeterLaTourrette/
birdphotography.com
 
© PeterLaTourrette/
birdphotography.com

California clapper rails probe the mud with their long beaks in search of worms, mussels, fish and other small invertebrates.Foraging for food is one of this bird's most hazardous activities, as the search leaves it exposed to predators such as the nonnative red fox and Norway rat as well as feral cats. The draining and filling of marshes around the San Francisco Bay has both destroyed the rail's habitat and eased access to the marsh for predators.

The clapper rail has a long, down-turned, reddish-orange bill.

© PeterLaTourrette/
birdphotography.com

These marsh birds build their nests near tidal sloughs using cordgrass, pickleweed and other plants. The male and female birds share incubation and rearing of the 4 to 14 eggs.

Although rail chicks are able to leave the nest soon after they hatch, many remain with their parents for several weeks. Some rail pairs nest twice during the breeding season that begins in February and continues until August.

Approximately 85 percent of the California clapper rail's habitat has been lost since the 1850s as a result of filling and diking. This dramatic loss and fragmentation of the salt marshes is the main factor in the population decline of the clapper rail. But recent efforts to control nonnative predators and restore the salt marsh habitat and a recent rail population increase may signal the start of a recovery for these birds. San Francisco Bay's Don Edwards National Wildlife Refuge is home to approximately sixty percent of the remaining population of California clapper rails.

 


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