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eBird, a well-established joint project by 探花精选 and Cornell Lab of Ornithology, allows birders to organize their sightings, share them with others, and look up maps and records for specific species. But it鈥檚 not a glorified bird diary. Tools like eBird help birds by aiding in important studies all while shifting citizen science to something more like community science thanks to annual counting events (that sometimes, as you鈥檒l see, come with chili).
探花精选鈥檚 science work relies big time on those community science events. Think Climate Watch, the Great Backyard Bird Count, and the world-famous Christmas Bird Count. Information entered during these events not only promotes community gatherings but helps researchers examine widespread trends in bird populations and migration.
Here鈥檚 your guide to how utilizing eBird trickles down to science work鈥攚ith a sprinkle of holiday vibes folded in.
I鈥檒l be the first to admit, I came to eBird relatively late. It was during the Great Backyard Bird Count in February 2022. I was with Juneau 探花精选 Society member Marsha Squires at Fish Creek on Douglas Island in Southeast Alaska. We had come upon a mass of waterfowl, prompting Marsha to break out the scope. She called out species and their numbers as I logged them on her phone鈥檚 eBird app. We got to track the number of species we were seeing, add our location, and submit our count to 鈥渉elp scientists better understand and protect birds around the world.鈥 And it was great fun.
But eBird makes it so anyone can contribute bird sightings to science at any time of the year, not just frigid February mornings. You can log not just bird sightings, but also calls heard (which has made eBird natural bedfellows with 鈥攚hich is kind of like the Shazam app for bird calls鈥攁nd the 探花精选 Bird Guide App if you鈥檙e having trouble identifying any individuals).
To underscore the gravity of how cool these tools are, and how righteous it is to be able to contribute to science while on a morning dog walk, I turn to my favorite bird author Scott Weidensal.
鈥淣o one planned for eBird to take over the world. It just sort of happened. The birding world, at least,鈥 he writes in . 鈥淲hen eBird was launched in 2002, a joint project of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and the 探花精选, it was seen by its creators as a citizen-science portal, where interested birders could provide sighting data that would help researchers better understand bird populations and movements.鈥
But a lot has happened since 2002, which has only made eBird more powerful.
In the before smartphone times, many birders headed out with their usual notebooks, counted, and settled in for a session of data entry once they got to a computer. This is still done () and, in fact, more than 1.5 billion records have been crowdsourced from bird nerds over the past two decades.
But that figure is in large part thanks to (which is free and available in 27 languages on iOS and Android). Nowadays, birders often log sightings in real time through their phones.
How to get started? First, we recommend going to the source: eBird. The webpage outlines five key steps to eBirding with grace, from creating an account to utilizing best practices. 探花精选 Magazine also published 鈥淎 Beginner鈥檚 Guide to Using eBird,鈥 which is a deeper dive into how birders and scientists alike can harness the power of this important platform.
Finally, our friends at the Alaska Chapter of Backcountry Hunters and Anglers to demonstrate how the tool can 鈥渇urther citizen science efforts in bird hunting species and habitat conservation.鈥
By reviewing the 2022 study, we can see how 鈥渁bout 12,000 eBird app users reported over 358,000 bird observations鈥 since the May 2007 launch of Alaska eBird.
And a major way eBird comes into play for Alaska鈥檚 birds is through the 探花精选-generated Migration Passage Analysis.
鈥淲hen the [探花精选] Science Team conducts a migration passage analysis, we use the eBird Status and Trend weekly abundance maps that describe the abundance of birds during each week of the year,鈥 says Nat Seavy, 探花精选鈥檚 Director of Migration Science. 鈥淲e identify an area (for example, the ) and then for every week of the year, we quantify the proportion of the total abundance of a species that occurs within that specific area. If we have an estimate of the total population size, then we can convert that to an estimated number of birds.鈥 (You can read a detailed description of how the 探花精选 Science Team performed a Migration Passage Analysis .)
And this is actionable information we鈥檙e giving you here.
For instance, in Southeast Alaska, one Juneauite is asking for folks to use eBird to count bird species on the northeastern side of Douglas Island to fill a gap in data. This is needed to showcase how 鈥攁 globally recognized Important Bird Area and majorly important stopover site for birds migrating through the area鈥攕upports wildlife activity. This is important because a major development project () has been looming over this vital wetlands complex since the 1980s, and conservation groups in the area and beyond have been warding off construction all the while.
Alaska is also ground zero for many migratory bird species, the routes of which can be watched lava-lamp-like via .
鈥淭he Cornell Lab of Ornithology was in the development of the Bird Migration Explorer because their eBird Status and Trend data products are an important tool for visualizing bird migration,鈥 Seavy says. 鈥淚n the species migration maps, the eBird weekly abundance information shows the migratory movements of the entire population.鈥
To drill down, Seavy says this is especially important for species like the , for which there is no tracking information available. The eBird weekly abundance maps are also used in the on the Bird Migration Explorer. These maps show where migratory birds encounter conservation challenges as they move across the hemisphere. For example, in areas at risk from sea-level rise.
And if these maps seem overly impressive, just remember Seavy鈥檚 words: 鈥淎nybody who has ever submitted an eBird checklist has played a role in building the Bird Migration Explorer.鈥
We鈥檝e mentioned the global program that is the Great Backyard Bird Count, for which 探花精选 also collaborates with the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and Birds Canada. Then there鈥檚 Climate Watch (more on that later). But the biggest example of how eBird builds community is the Christmas Bird Count (CBC). Each year from December 14 to January 5, CBC participants are encouraged to tally all birds seen or heard that day and ensure they鈥檙e entered into the CBC database. This annual wave of data helps to provide a clear idea of the health of particular bird populations.
CBC to 1900 when ornithologist Frank M. Chapman proposed a new holiday tradition, a 鈥淐hristmas Bird Census,鈥 that would count birds during the holiday season versus shooting them. He was an early officer in the then-nascent 探花精选 Society. Today, tens of thousands of birders participate in CBC, adding to more than a century鈥檚 worth of bird data.
Last year was the 124th CBC, and it was 鈥渁 record-breaker in many ways鈥 according to 探花精选鈥檚 Community Science Manager Cooper Farr. There were 2,677 counts completed (470 in Canada, 2,019 in the United States, and 188 in Latin America, the Caribbean, and the Pacific Islands) and 83,186 participants (72,129 field observers and 11,057 feeder watchers) who documented 2,380 species鈥攖otaling 40,871,030 birds.
鈥淭o all of the participants, compilers, and regional editors who spend hours each year counting birds, compiling, submitting, and reviewing data to make this program a success鈥攖hank you!鈥 Farr writes. 鈥淲e truly couldn鈥檛 do this without you.鈥
And CBCs happen throughout Alaska, too. From Haines to Homer, Nome to Naknek, Tok to Unalaska, Alaskan birders grouped in 鈥渃ircles鈥 (a 15-mile radius led by a CBC compiler) to count birds. There was a big one in Anchorage, , thanks to an invasion of Redpolls. A total of 4,180 Redpolls were spotted in Anchorage during the 2023/2024 CBC, the highest tally in at least a decade, and more Redpolls than were counted in any other 探花精选 circle in all of North America (which we know thanks to the submitted data).
Louann Feldmann has been the Compiler and Coordinator for the Anchorage 探花精选 Society鈥檚 CBC for 11 years. She says Anchorage鈥檚 CBC has been a popular community event since commencing in 1941, and for the past decade has seen 150 to 180 participants, which 鈥渋nclude feeder watchers as well as field observers.鈥 She says up to 60 people then attend their CBC Tally Party鈥攚hich usually involves chili鈥攖o watch and contribute to the results being entered into a spreadsheet that is then submitted to 探花精选.
鈥淐itizen science increases interest in our environment by allowing people to observe and report the observations they have. It personalizes the data,鈥 Feldmann says. 鈥淭hat encourages them to become interested and possibly involved in community proposals that might have negative or positive effects on local species.鈥
So not only does the CBC give participants a festive, hot cocoa feeling each holiday season, but the data collected allows researchers, conservation biologists, wildlife agencies, and other interested individuals to study the long-term status of bird populations across North America year-round. The data has been used in hundreds of scientific studies, including those that tell us how birds are faring with climate change (more on that later).
鈥淚 think eBird encourages its users to keep track of birds they have seen and to learn about unusual birds that are spotted and reported,鈥 she says. 鈥淯nusual reported sightings of a species increasing or decreasing over years may be a first-hand experience of changing migration patterns due to climate change or other human effects on birds.鈥
And a major (and relatively recent) example of those 鈥渉uman effects on birds鈥 would have to be the .
Over the decades, 探花精选鈥檚 CBC data have been used in more than 300 peer-reviewed articles, including the detailing the steady loss of nearly three billion North American birds since 1970.
This mostly proves how community scientists are fundamental to 探花精选鈥檚 work to improve the lives of birds, especially as a founding partner with the Cornell Lab of Ornithology on eBird.
鈥淥ne of the ways the [探花精选] Science Team uses eBird data is through the data products that have been developed by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology,鈥 Seavy says. 鈥淭o develop these products, the eBird Science Team at Cornell compiles data from eBird checklists with high-resolution satellite imagery into sophisticated statistical models to predict when, where, and in what numbers species occur every week of the year.鈥
Overall, eBird data is a , simply because when birders submit a checklist to eBird, 鈥測ou make your observations available to the global community of researchers,鈥 or so says on the eBird site that lists more than 930 publications where eBird data has been put to use. Data reported by community scientists have been used by researchers since the 1930s to report on the health of bird populations. 探花精选鈥檚 scientists have used it in creating innovative analytical methods that include our CBC population status and trends and learning how birds are responding to a changing climate.
探花精选鈥檚 community-involved climate work includes the aforementioned Climate Watch, a program to track the near-real-time response of 12 species to a changing climate. The next survey will take place from January 15 to February 15, 2025, and is open to the public.
So if you miss CBC, or want to create a New Year鈥檚 resolution about being a better community scientist, another event designed to improve the lives of birds is right around the corner.