Human & Animal Health

VOLUNTEER SPOTLIGHT: Ryane Logsdon

A wildlife enthusiast since childhood, Ryane Logsdon is now finishing her Ph.D. thesis in the Animal Behavior Graduate Group at UC Davis. In between research, writing, and her many other academic duties, she makes time to volunteer at the California Raptor Center. With more than four years at the CRC under her belt, Ryane is involved in many aspects of the center’s operations, from rehabilitation to educational outreach to training the ambassador birds.

We asked her about how she got here and what keeps her coming to the CRC:

Surviving Against the Odds: The Story of the CRC's Newest Ambassador Eagle

Ingela Kaersvang thought the eaglet was dead.

The Rumsey resident was making one of her regular visits to a local Bald Eagle nest when she saw a gust of wind bring an eaglet crashing to the ground. The chick fell, hitting branches as he tumbled from the tree’s crown to the field below. "He hit the ground in a heap... and I was sure he was dead, and then he lifted his head," said Kaersvang.

A Baby Season Like No Other

Baby season—the peak reproductive months for local raptors, falling roughly between February and August—is always one of the busiest times at the California Raptor Center. Staff and volunteers expect to be bustling about the facility, working long hours in the heat of the summer to care for the inevitable influx of baby raptors. It is an annual, anticipated challenge, but 2020 presented a whole new set of hardships on top of the norm: with a global pandemic that led to lockdowns and closures in early spring, the CRC faced baby season with only a skeleton crew of essential staff.

Volunteer Spotlight: Joleen Maiden

Volunteering Champ

Joleen fell in love with birds when she was about 7 years old. A friend's talking parrot was what first captured her attention–she got her own first large parrot in 1981 and hired a behaviorist, who ultimately introduced her to Bird Rescue of Santa Rosa. She became a raptor rehabilitation volunteer at Bird Rescue and has continued on and off for the past 38 years.

Studying Atherosclerosis in Raptors

Dr. Lujan-Vega studied veterinary medicine at the oldest university in America (founded in 1551), Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos in Lima, Peru. She obtained her veterinary degree in 2012 there and then completed her master’s degree in Avian Sciences at UC Davis in 2015 with Dr.

Turkey Vulture Times Two

Turkey Vultures may be a common sight in the skies, but their babies are a rare sight at rehabilitation clinics. Hence it was with much surprise that California Raptor Center staff and volunteers found themselves caring for not one, but three baby Turkey Vultures over the summer of 2019.