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San Diego’s coastal wetlands are home to rich biodiversity, critical migratory bird habitats, and culturally significant lands. Thanks to a generous two-year grant from the Dorrance Family Foundation, Audubon California and our partners, including the Buena Vista Audubon and the San Diego Bird Alliance, will continue making important progress in restoring key estuarine habitats in the region. For the fourth year in a row, the Dorrance Family Foundation has awarded significant funding to Audubon California and our partners to restore critical habitat along San Diego County’s Mission Bay and Buena Vista Lagoon.
This funding ensures that we can continue working alongside community members and Indigenous partners to restore these vital ecosystems, improve conditions for endangered species like the Ridgway’s Rail, and increase public access to these spaces. Explore what’s been accomplished so far and what’s ahead below.
Both project sites hold vital ecological and cultural significance for birds, other wildlife, and communities, as part of a vital wetland network supporting waterfowl and shorebirds along the Pacific Flyway.
These sites also provide essential ecosystem services such as carbon sequestration, pollution mitigation, and coastal protection. And beyond the environmental and natural impacts of these beautiful places, they both hold deep cultural significance for the Cahuilla, Cupeño, Kumeyaay, and Payómkawichum peoples, highlighting the need to restore access and connection to these lands.
“This generous two-year grant from the Dorrance Family Foundation enables us to complete the complex permitting and planning necessary for our Buena Vista Lagoon wetlands project to become restored to a healthy ecosystem. This also allows healing of people: by bringing the original inhabitants of the land, the Payómkawichum people, into the restoration project on an equal footing with the engineers and permitting agencies, healing of past traumas and injustices can begin.”
– Natalie Shapiro, Executive Director, Buena Vista Audubon Society
At Famosa Slough (Mission Bay), the San Diego Bird Alliance (SDBA) restored five acres of coastal habitat, working with Kumeyaay community members to harvest culturally significant plant species like tule and willow for traditional boat-making community events.
In partnership with Renascence, a Kumeyaay-led nonprofit that works to connect the Kumeyaay people to their traditional coastal lands, a digital StoryMap was released highlighting the life of Delfina Cuero, a Kumeyaay woman whose story is interlocked with Mission Bay and the water, plants, and animals that were found then and now.
“Last year, over 15,000 Elegant terns nested in Mission Bay making it one of the most important nesting sites in the world. This support will help us get this nesting site protected, restored, and monitored so that it can be a critical nesting site again. And just a few hundred feet from this site is the last remaining Ridgway’s Rail habitat in Mission Bay. Again, this funding will help us protect, restore, monitor and share this species and the habitats’ long cultural connections to the Kumeyaay Native Americans, with the public.”
– Andrew Meyer, Director of Conservation, San Diego Bird Alliance
What’s Ahead
Looking to the next two years, we aim to:
Want to support this critical work? Here’s how:
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