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Birding News and Features

eBird & Birds of North America Online

December 14, 2009
eBird & Birds of North America Online In appreciation for all those who have participated in the eBird effort for the past year, we are pleased to offer special full subscriptions to the acclaimed bird life history resource: Birds of North America Online. This comprehensive resource includes information on distribution, breeding, migration, habitats, and behavior for over 700 different species of birds that breed in Canada and the United States. The accounts include photos and audio selections for all species covered.

New iPhone App harnesses the power of eBird--Check out BirdsEye!

December 03, 2009
New iPhone App harnesses the power of eBird--Check out BirdsEye! “BirdsEye is the best invention for birding since binoculars,” says Kenn Kaufman, renowned birder, author of the Kaufman Field Guide to Birds of North America and team member of a partnership that has created BirdsEye, a new birding app for the iPhone® and iPod touch®. “It’s like having thousands of local birding experts in your pocket,” Kaufman says. The application was developed by Birds in the Hand, LLC, of Virginia, and brings together content from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, the Academy of Natural Sciences, and Kaufman. BirdsEye is now available on the App Store℠.

Two new ways to make your birding count!

November 13, 2009
Two new ways to make your birding count! From its inception, the grand hypothesis of eBird has been that the observations of birders can make a valuable contribution to understanding broad-scale patterns of bird distribution and abundance. With its vast geographic scope and dedicated contributors, eBird has a growing capacity to help answer questions about birds at scales never before imaginable. As the eBird dataset continues to mature, scientists are just beginning to explore and tap its potential. Early results are promising, and thanks to our close working relationship with talented computer scientists and biologists, we’ve identified two ways that you can help greatly improve the utility of the eBird dataset. Read more by clicking the image at right.

Exposing eBird Species Comments

October 23, 2009
Exposing eBird Species Comments

eBird has two comments fields that can be used however you choose. Checklist comments can be personal comments on the day, where you went, or what the weather was like, and this is also a great place for personal notes. The second field, species comments, is very useful for providing additional detail on the rare birds you see, helping others to find a bird you discover, or generally for providing more information on specific sightings within a checklist. Team eBird is committed to making eBird data as useful as possible and as we develop new ways to push eBird data out to birders, this free text field will become increasingly important. However, since everyone may use this field differently, we wanted to give a heads up. Starting in a few weeks, we plan to make your species comments available through new output tools (not the checklist comments) along with the date, location, and count of species you observe.

eBird is for Every Birder!

August 28, 2009
eBird is for Every Birder!

Occasionally we hear about birders who tried eBird once, but then did not return because they felt they were not qualified to contribute, or that eBird caters only to “expert” birders. This is not the case at all! At eBird we believe that all bird observations have value. You need not be a globetrotting expert—some of the most valuable checklists are repeated observations from people who have never looked for birds outside their own backyard! You need not know every bird that flashes through your binoculars either, the eBird data quality process guards against many potential identification errors. Furthermore, the exchange of information between experts and beginners during this process is a valuable learning tool. We want eBird to be used by birders of all skill levels: our only request is that you try to use eBird to its fullest capacity, report the birds you see and hear to the best of your ability, and err on the conservative side if you are unsure about your identification.

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