Backyard Bird Count

Finally joined ebird in order to contribute to this project. Don't have to contribute pictures to that so actually submitted more birds there than here and of course had to include the numbers observed too. So the 40 Sandhill Cranes that flew over got counted but didn't have my camera at the time. There were two White-breasted Nuthatches and an American Goldfinch that escaped the camera too. Considered doing the count on other days of the week end where additional species were seen but ended up just observing and shooting pictures. It sure is hard to count moving targets.

Publicado el 17 de febrero de 2021 a las 03:49 AM por taogirl taogirl

Observaciones

Fotos / Sonidos

Qué

Junco Ojos Negros (Junco hyemalis)

Autor

taogirl

Fecha

Febrero 13, 2021

Fotos / Sonidos

Qué

Pinzón Mexicano (Haemorhous mexicanus)

Autor

taogirl

Fecha

Febrero 13, 2021

Fotos / Sonidos

Qué

Trepadorcito Americano (Certhia americana)

Autor

taogirl

Fecha

Febrero 13, 2021

Fotos / Sonidos

Qué

Gorrión Corona Blanca (Zonotrichia leucophrys)

Autor

taogirl

Fecha

Febrero 13, 2021

Fotos / Sonidos

Qué

Gorrión Doméstico (Passer domesticus)

Autor

taogirl

Fecha

Febrero 13, 2021

Fotos / Sonidos

Qué

Paloma Turca de Collar (Streptopelia decaocto)

Autor

taogirl

Fecha

Febrero 13, 2021

Fotos / Sonidos

Qué

Junco Ojos Negros (Junco hyemalis)

Autor

taogirl

Fecha

Febrero 13, 2021

Comentarios

I have posted sightings on both ebird and iNaturalist. I sometimes feel guilty posting the same birds over and over on iNaturalist, but ebird can be more of a commitment than I want to make - to count all the birds, keep track of the time I'm watching, etc. In general, I use ebird when I'm going to dedicate the next few minutes/hours, etc to birding.

Anotado por apcorboy hace cerca de 3 años

I have resisted ebird although most everyone in my Audubon group does it. INaturalist suits me better generally because I am interested in everything that crawls, flies, grows. However ebird was the only meaningful way to join the count. I have Merlin on my phone but use it now just for ID help. I was feeling guilty about posting repeatedly with so many of the same birds on iNaturalist but recently attended a zoom with Dr Floyd about using both iNat and ebird for Citizen Science and he heavily encouraged recording repeatedly what you are seeing even if it is the same species, that the information is useful. So I will continue as it makes life more interesting and hopefully it will provide some valuable information to someone. I have received requests to use pictures/observations for someone's paper in Europe of some insect from my back yard etc. Great fun!

Anotado por taogirl hace cerca de 3 años

One plus for ebird is they don't seem to care whether the bird photos I post are of the same bird, whereas on iNaturalist, if I have some photos that are a few minutes apart, or have another creature in between, I am hesitant to combine them if I can't remember whether it's the exact same bird or not.

Anotado por apcorboy hace cerca de 3 años

I have made mistakes before when I thought it was the same bird and was actually apparently different species.

Anotado por taogirl hace cerca de 3 años

and on iNat if I have seen five different Mountain Bluebirds I generally just put up one but might put up two if I have individual pics of a male and female, for example.

Anotado por taogirl hace cerca de 3 años

Añade un comentario

Entra o Regístrate para añadir comentarios