Entries Tagged 'eBird' ↓

Birdfreak Guide to eBird

The following is a tutorial on how to use eBird and get the most out of this amazing bird sighting recording tool. eBird was created by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and the National Audubon Society as a way for users all over to submit checklists of bird sightings. The goal is to use these location-based checklists to help aide bird conservation projects.

Getting Started - Registration

eBird is a free service and to sign up is easy. Go to ebird.org or if you wish, you can go to a more specified subset of eBird for your own state. eBird lists “Regional Projects Near You” on their homepage that includes state specific eBird programs (where available). In Illinois we use ebird.org/bcn for the Bird Conservation Network that includes the Chicago area and parts of northern Illinois including our county, Winnebago.

Submitting Observations

Adding your sightings to eBird is pretty straightforward but can look a bit overwhelming at first. Follow these steps to make it easier.

  1. Click the submit observations tab
  2. If this is the first time using this, you will need to add a new location
  3. Select Find it on a Map
  4. Fill out the fields and continue
  5. A Google map will load and allow you to move around, zoom in and select a point; if the birding spot you are selecting is already in the system you can select that.
  6. Add a name and continue {you can also check the option to suggest the place as a birding hotspot}
  7. Date and Effort: This section allows you to submit how long you were out birding, the date, the distance covered, and how many birders were in your party. The minimum amount of information is “Casual Observation” which just needs the date. You can enter past data from any date. Click continue
  8. Step 3 – What Did You See or Hear? – This section is where you enter the actual birds seen/heard. The layout is in checklist format and can be alphabetic or taxonomic. You can either enter a number or an X to indicate the bird was found but no number counted. eBird is amazing in that the system knows what birds are more likely in an area and time. This means that most of the birds on the list are what would most likely be encountered. If, however, a rare bird (one not listed) was found, you can select the “rare species” option to get that list.
  9. Step 4 – Confirmation and Notes – This is your last chance to review your sightings and add some extra field notes (especially useful if reporting a rare bird). You can go back and change any errors or add birds you missed. You have the option of emailing a copy to yourself (the email you have on file) which is especially useful if you wish to forward the list to someone else (or file it away)
  10. Hit submit and the sightings are added

A few notes on submissions: if you are reporting a large number of birds of a particular species or a bird that is quite uncommon, the system will alert you and ask for you to confirm. This helps prevent typos. Actual rare sightings are reviewed and you will be emailed if a sighting seems highly unlikely.

The process of entering sightings might seem a bit slow and time consuming, but compared with other systems and filing away the data yourself, eBird works well. And submitting data is just the first part of the program.

View and Explore Data

You have two options when viewing data:

  1. Explore all eBird observations
    • A particular species – allows you to view up to five species at a time
    • All birds at a location – allows you to view all the birds seen at a particular location whether it be a state, county, or even your own backyard (as long as you have it as a location)
    • Summarize all eBird observations – here you can select the whole system’s data do get a snapshot of what has happened in the past week, month or year beginning on whatever date you select. You can then choose these sightings in a particular state, county, hotspot, or even a Bird Conservation Region!
  2. Explore My Observations
    • Make maps and graphs of my data – here you can view bar graphs of your sightings at particular locations. The bar graphs show the monthly abundance of birds reported
    • Summarize my observations – allows you to view a summary of your data by week, month, or year
    • View your lists and stats with MyEbird – gives a quick summary of your eBird lifelist, year list, month list, regional lists, and county lists – a very neat tool for anyone loving listing!

The overall purpose of eBird (in our opinion) is threefold: bird population trending (for bird conservation), bird abundance (for traveling birders), and bird listing.

  1. Bird population trending – a great tool for bird conservation management planning, the data from many birders across an area can be collected and graphed and even mapped to help determine areas of decline or high density of particular species.
  2. Bird abundance – the monthly abundance graphs are great for traveling birders. If you are heading to southeastern Arizona and want to know what birds are likely in August, eBird can help you with that.
  3. Bird listing – eBird provides an easy to use, portable system of keeping track of all your major lists.

Feel free to print this out for reference and share with all your birding friends! eBird improves when more people get involved!

eBird - Illinois Bird Sighting Checklists

eBird is the online birding checklist submission headquarters. Birders from all over the U.S. (Canada and elsewhere too) can submit their bird sightings through an easy to use form. This data can be used to develop trends in bird populations as well as to determine abundancy and dates when birds are at a particular location. The beauty of eBird doesn’t stop there.

Members (free membership is required) can use their collected checklists to create all sorts of meaningful histograms: location, time, particular species, etc. They can also use eBird if they are into listing: life, year, month, county, and location are all tracked and can be called up and downloaded.

But where eBird really pays off is when lots of birders use it. When many checklists are submitted from many different locations over a long period of time, real data can be gleaned. Here lies the problem. The number of checklists submitted is low compared to how many birders could be using the service. For example, from the first of the year to February 26, there have only been 492 checklists submitted for Illinois. This makes Illinois below the top 20 despite it being the 5th most populated state (and one with quite a bit of birders).

To help increase the data collected, we’ve vowed to promote this wonderful service to anyone we bird with locally. Our local bird club, NCIOS, of which we created the website for, now has its own eBird account. It is our hopes that we can convince our local birders to submit loads of checklists. We started this about a week ago and so far we’ve added 11 checklists.

We encourage all birders to try eBird out. It is pretty easy to use but might take a little while to get used to setting up locations. Once you have that ready, get those checklists going!

eBird Update

For those of you who haven’t used eBird much (or at all) this is another reminder. eBird’s ease of use and reporting tools are fun and important for bird conservation data. Since the first of the year we have made an effort to submit as many daily checklists as possible for the counties we bird in.

So far we have submitted 11 checklists for a total of 34 species. As the weather gets better (and there is more daylight/time for birding) these numbers will increase dramatically. It will be fun to review the data after 6 months, a year, two years, five years and more!

As of January 31st, Illinois birders have only submitted 486 checklists in 2007. New York has submitted over 3,200!

eBird - putting your birdlists into the big picture

Launched in 2002 by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and the National Audubon Society, Ebird is a real-time, online checklist program that is free and easy to use. Their goal is to record as much bird data as possible by both recreational and professional bird watchers.

It seems to be working. In 2006, participants reported more than 4.3 million bird observations across North America. Hopefully, Ebird will continue to grow.

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We want to encourage EVERYONE to join this online program. It is a great way to track all of your birdlists, from daily lists to life lists. One of the neatest features is the use of graphs that show abundance based on what data is recorded. Hence, the more people the more correct these graphs will be.

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