TY - JOUR AU - Reid, Frederic A. AU - Heitmeyer, Mickey E. TI - Sidebar: Waterfowl and rice in California's Central Valley JF - California Agriculture JO - Calif Agr Y1 - 1995/11/01 VL - 49 IS - 6 SP - 62 EP - 62 PB - University of California Agriculture and Nature Resources SN - 0008-0845 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.3733/ca.v049n06p62 L3 - 10.3733/ca.v049n06p62 AB - Abstract Not Available – First paragraph follows: Wetlands of California's Central Valley historically held one of the largest concentrations of wintering waterfowl in the world. In wet winters, some 2 million to 4 million acres of seasonal and semi-permanent wetlands were flooded in the Valley. It is estimated that as many as 40 million to 50 million waterfowl once funneled down the Pacific Flyway — from the arctic tundra of the Northwest Territories, the boreal forests of Alaska, the prairies of Canada, and the alkaline flats of the Great Basin — to the Central Valley. As recently as the 1970s, some 10 million to 12 million swans, geese, and ducks wintered in or migrated through California; large numbers of other waterbirds such as shore-birds, cranes, wading birds, rails, grebes and gulls also came.