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Subject:

eBird and Christmas Bird Counts

From:

Ronald Gutberlet

Reply-To:

Ronald Gutberlet

Date:

Mon, 12 Dec 2011 21:33:56 -0500

Hi Everyone,

With the Christmas Bird Count season right around the corner, the folks at eBird have provided a great summary of how to double your contribution to bird science and conservation this year.  The information below is pasted directly from eBird (http://ebird.org/content/ebird/news/ebirding-your-christmas-bird-counts).

Hope some of you find it helpful, and if any new eBird users out there have questions, I'd be happy to try to answer them.  Enjoy the CBC season!

Ron Gutberlet
Salisbury, MD



eBirding your Christmas Bird Counts

December 14 will begin the 112th Christmas Bird Count (CBC) season, and the first big weekend of counts will be 17-18 December. The Christmas Count is the largest and longest-running ornithological citizen science project. Its data are a great complement to what we are collecting in eBird, and indeed the CBC has paved the way for eBird in many respects. It is not a problem to enter data in eBird and then submit it for the CBC too, since the two projects are collecting data in similar ways, but at different scales. eBird can be a great way to store your sector-level data and compare it from year to year.  As you head out to do Christmas Counts this season, please remember the following:

1)    Entering data for the CBC and for eBird presents no problem at all. Indeed, one day we envision the possibility of entering your eBird list and having it automatically contribute to the CBC.

2)    Most CBC circles are divided into multiple sectors, with teams of people (“parties”) covering each sector. Remember that eBird counts are single party counts, so any data collected during the CBC season should be entered for single parties only, not parties that spend a lot of time split up.

3)    The official CBC effort does not permanently store information at the “sector” level. eBird provides an opportunity to permanently record those data. For example, most coastal counts will have a substantially different mix of birds on the open beach versus areas 5 or 10 miles inland. eBird thrives on location specificity, so we welcome your sector data from the CBC.

4)    While eBird works best with location specific sightings, it can be time consuming to enter multiple lists from a single day. We certainly appreciate those who take the time to break a day of birding into discrete stops, but a day-long traveling count or area count is not inappropriate. The important thing is that you describe what you did (accurate mileage, duration etc.)

5)    If you do use a day-long count to enter your count, please give some thought as to the location that you use. Please do not plot your point at a 'hotspot' if you spent significant time birding outside of the hotspot area. It is far better to plot a new point to represent the CBC sector, and to name it in a way that makes it clear what it represents -- such as “Lakeville CBC--Sector 5”. Since hotspot summaries depend on data collected at the actual point, the bar charts and other summaries become much less meaningful when they include data from outside the location.

If you haven't already, contact your local compiler, or see the "Get Involved" page for the Christmas Bird Count at:    http://birds.audubon.org/get-involved-christmas-bird-count.

Many thanks in advance to all of who participate in both eBird and the CBC. Our collective knowledge of birds has grown exponentially thanks to the efforts of citizen scientists like yourselves. Everyone at Team eBird enthusiastically participates in our local CBCs, so please get out there, have fun, and enjoy the compilations!
While you are at the compilation, try to think about what patterns are emerging this year. Are northern species occurring in good numbers? Did your count get a Snowy Owl this year (they are on the move in 2011)? Are Bald Eagle numbers continuing to increase and kestrels continuing to decline?  How are the half-hardy wintering birds like catbirds, Winter Wrens, and Yellow-rumped Warblers? Then, when you get home, try ‘View and Explore’ in eBird to see if you can learn more about these questions!
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