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GBBC 2015 Halftime Report
by Marshall Iliff, eBird/GBBC
February 15, 2015
We’re off to another great start this year, despite very trying winter
weather conditions in some parts of the United States. (Currently -2° F,
and -26° F with wind chill, here in Ithaca, N.Y.!) Thanks to all of you who
have been out counting birds! The checklists are rolling in from around the
globe and we’re hoping to surpass last year’s record Great Backyard Bird
Count results. Like many of us, Gary Mueller of Missouri and his
birds have caught GBBC fever. See his great photo below!
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Photo
by Gary Mueller, Missouri, 2015 GBBC
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As of mid-afternoon on Sunday, February 15, (eastern U.S. time zone) we
have received checklists from 116
countries, including Australia, Kuwait, Iceland, India,
South Africa, Thailand, Malaysia, the Philippines, Turkey, and many more.
Below are the top 10 countries by numbers of checklists submitted along
with their species tallies. Click on the country name to get the very
latest totals in our “Explore a Region” tool.
Country
|
Number of
Species
|
Number of
Checklists
|
|
620
|
42,862
|
|
227
|
4,029
|
|
589
|
3,119
|
|
481
|
499
|
|
516
|
140
|
|
165
|
110
|
|
109
|
88
|
|
77
|
72
|
|
325
|
65
|
|
119
|
53
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Last year participants tallied more than
40% of the world’s bird species and we’re wondering if we might reach 50%
this year. It will be quite a challenge, but there’s still time to get out
there and add new species!
The Snowy Owl invasion—round 2
Last year was an epic year for Snowy Owls,
but winter 2014-2015 has brought a pretty impressive “echo” flight. Read more about the where Snowy Owls have been
appearing this winter.
Compare the February 2014 map (top) to this year (bottom). You’ll notice
that both years have a lot of Snowy Owls and that the regions with snowies
are pretty similar between years, but that there were more individuals
reported in 2015—a classic “echo” flight. Zoom in on this map
to see where Snowy Owls are being seen this month. Taking a non-birding
friend out to see a Snowy Owl is one of the surest ways to get a new person
interested in birding!
Snowy Owl eBird Reports February 2014
Snowy Owl eBird Reports February 2015
Winter finches are on the move this year, after an abysmal GBBC in 2014
when most winter finches stayed too far north in Canada to be counted.
Watch the maps fill in for Common Redpoll and
Pine Siskin,
and see if you can find those species in your area!
Exciting rare birds
Along the Pacific
Coast there have been good numbers of Asian birds spending the winter. Some
of the strong Pacific storms in the fall may have blown a few birds off course,
and once on the North American landmass it seems that some species wandered
south. A Rustic Bunting
in San Francisco has been a star attraction for a few months now, and has
been counted for the GBBC—the first ever for San Francisco and one of very
few for California. (Photo
of Rustic Bunting by Michael O'Brien, California)
News just in today is that a backyard GBBCer in King County, Washington,
photographed a Brambling
at her feeders. A number of Bramblings reached the West Coast of the United
States this year after the Pacific storms, but this is a super-exciting
find for the GBBC—this is a species that is common in Eurasia and extremely
rare in the Americas.
The Arctic is changing, and while its overall effects on our climate and on
the fragile Arctic ecosystem are still being studied, one thing seems
clear: the thawing Arctic is allowing birds to move more freely around the
poles. Slaty-backed
Gull, Tufted
Puffin, Northern
Gannet, and a number of other species have appeared in the
“wrong” oceans in recent years, presumably dispersing through open water
corridors in northern Canada and maybe over the pole.
This could be the explanation for north America’s first Common Scoter, which
was first identified a few weeks ago in Crescent City, California. Since
this is a European species, birders have been watching for it on the East
Coast, and its appearance in the Pacific is a first-ever for the species
and is very unexpected. It may headline as the most exciting bird counted
for the GBBC in North America. Have a look at the GBBC checklist with a photo of the
species.
Last year we
highlighted two Mexican species that are moving north and being found
regularly in the border states now: Sinaloa
Wren (so far, found only in Arizona) and Rufous-capped Warbler
(Arizona and Texas). Both have been found during this year’s GBBC too, and
there is a new one to add to the mix that few would have expected: Striped Sparrow. This
Mexican endemic sparrow is almost towhee-sized and few experts would have
predicted its appearance, especially so far from the border near Austin.
Although how and why it has appeared in the U.S. is still unclear, intrepid
GBBCers have gone out to make sure it has been counted and it represents a
new bird for the count in the U.S. (Striped
Sparrow by Dominic Sherony via Wikipedia Creative
Commons)
International highlights
Once again, India has been a lot of fun to watch during the
GBBC! Indian birders have been abuzz on Facebook and other
social media to promote the count and their great efforts are
showing. This year we are seeing 598 species and 3,096 checklists (a
huge increase over the 500 species and 1,184 checklists at this point last
year!)
Some 485 species
have been found down under these past 2 days. Several of the top submitters
have had more than 100 species--pretty impressive for the dead of summer
for Oz! I bet they have been warmer than the Canadian eBirders/GBBCers, who
have dressed warm and worked hard for their 228 species. Thank goodness for the
comparatively temperate province of British Columbia, which is leading the way
by contributing 80% of the species (184). Reifel Bird Sanctuary alone has
contributed 76 species, more than provincial totals for all but Ontario,
Quebec, and Nova Scotia. Kudos to all Canadians who have braved the
temperatures in the dead of winter to monitor bird populations! Birders in Mexico have surely been more comfortable
as they have tallied 516 species (half of the country’s avifauna!) on their
147 checklists. With lots of endemic birds in the country, we hope a few
more can be added to the global tally before the count closes out tomorrow.
(Mauritius Fody by Varina
Ramdonee, Mauritius, 2015 GBBC)
New and growing eBird communities are becoming part of the GBBC. Malaysian birders are taking part this
year for the first time. Their start is modest (17 lists and 190 species),
but this is an area that had not been covered at all before, so this is a
great beginning. Watch for Malaysia to take off in 2016! In the Philippines, birders have posted 34 lists
and 154 species and like Malaysia, this includes a lot of unique species
that cannot be found elsewhere. Portuguese birders are rising to the
challenge too, and will be adding a custom version of eBird for their
country very soon. As of midday Sunday, they have spotted 164 species on
102 checklists, with more still coming in. Taiwan, which will also be adding a
version of eBird in Mandarin later this year, is another area rich in
endemic birds, so the 33 checklists reporting 153 species include some key
ones for the global total. Some excellent local promotion has made Serbia a surprise member of the leader
board. Serbian birders have found 120 species so far in 2015, with 77 so far
for the GBBC. Can they break 100 species on the final day of the GBBC?
Let’s all join in cheering them towards that goal! There are many other
areas pitching in: Argentina, Mexico, Puerto Rico, Kuwait, Thailand, New Zealand, and more. Try exploring
yourself to see what others are seeing around the world.
You can continue to enter your checklists through the GBBC website through
the end of February. After that, you can still enter lists for the count by
going directly to the eBird website, using your same user name and
password.
If you haven’t already,
try some of these activities:
- Explore
what’s being reported with the “Explore a Location” tool. You can
see what species are being reported and how many checklists are being
turned in at the county, state/province, and country levels. Just
click “Explore Data” on the GBBC or eBird websites and you’ll see the
“Explore a Location” tool at the top of the list.
- Go
to ebird.org and try making a Targets list for your county or state in
February. This may show what species are around that you have not yet
reported. Click “map” to see where to find those birds and perhaps
you’ll get to see and report them for the GBBC.
- Submit photos for the GBBC photo contest
or just explore some of the fantastic images that are coming in!
- Sign up for the GBBC eNewsletter on
the website homepage. This is the best way to stay on top of any
updates and to get word of the 2014 count summary when it’s ready.
Thanks for counting with us—let’s keep a
good thing going!
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