110
YEARS AND COUNTING: AUDUBON PREPARES FOR 2009 CHRISTMAS BIRD
COUNT
Annual
Count Yields Citizen Science Data Vital to Conservation
New York, NY, 2 September 2009—The longest
running Citizen Science survey in the world, Audubon’s
annual Christmas Bird Count (CBC) will take place between
December 14, 2009 and January 5, 2010. From Alaska to Antarctica,
tens of thousands of volunteers throughout the hemisphere
will add a new layer to over a century of bird population
information.
Scientist rely on this remarkable trend data to better
understand how birds and the environment are faring throughout
North America – and what needs to be done to protect
them. Data from Audubon’s signature Citizen Science
program are at the heart of numerous peer-reviewed scientific
studies. CBC data informed the first
U. S State of the Birds Report, issued earlier this
year by the Department of the Interior in partnership Audubon
and with a dozen other conservation organizations. CBC analysis
also fueled Audubon’s February report that revealed
the dramatic impact that Climate
Change is already having on birds across the continent.
The Christmas Bird Count began in 1900 when the founder
of Bird-Lore (the progenitor of Audubon magazine),
Frank Chapman, suggested an alternative to the “side
hunt,” in which teams competed to see who could shoot
the most game, including birds. Chapman proposed that people
“hunt” birds only to identify, count, and record
them. These Binocular Brigades often brave winter’s
chill, ice and snow to record changes in resident populations
and ranges, before spring migrants return.
“When Frank Chapman started the Christmas Bird Census,
it was a visionary act,” said Audubon President John
Flicker. “No one could have predicted how important
the CBC would become as a resource and tool for conservation.
It allows birds to send us a wake up call about the importance
of addressing the warming of our climate and the loss of
vital habitat through action at every level.”
CBC data not only helps identify birds in most urgent need
of conservation action; it reveals success stories. The
Christmas Bird Count helped document the comeback of the
previously endangered Bald Eagle, and significant increases
in waterfowl populations, both the result of conservation
efforts.
“Everyone who takes part in the Christmas Birds Count
plays a critical role in helping us focus attention and
conservation where it is most needed.” said Audubon
Chief Scientist, Dr.
Tom Bancroft, “In addition to Audubon’s
reports on the impacts of Climate Change on birds and our
analysis of Common
Birds in Decline, it is the foundation for Audubon’s
WatchList,
which identified species in need of conservation help.
“The Christmas Bird Count is all about the power
of Citizen Science” says Geoff
LeBaron, Audubon's Christmas Bird Count director. “Our
theme is ’I Count’ because the work of tens
of thousands of volunteers, extending one hundred and ten
years, really adds up for the conservation of birds and
our environment.”
The prestigious journal Nature issued an editorial
citing CBC as a "model" for Citizen Science.
Last year, The Economist described it as "A
splendid tradition in its 109th year."
A New
York Times opinion piece captured the pleasure and
precision of counting: “The personal joy they experience
from patiently spotting and jotting down each flitting fellow
creature, exotic or not, is balanced by a strong pragmatic
factor in the management of the census by the National Audubon
Society.”
Counts are often multi-generational family or community
traditions that make for fascinating stories. Accuracy is
assured by having new participants join an established group
that includes at least one experienced birdwatcher. Count
volunteers follow specified routes through a designated
15-mile (24-km) diameter circle or can arrange in advance
to count the birds at home feeders inside the circle and
submit the results to a designated compiler. All individual
Christmas Bird Counts are conducted between December 14
and January 5 (inclusive) each season, with each individual
count occupying a single calendar day.
Check this web page in November in order to apply www.audubon.org/bird/cbc/getinvolved.html
To learn how to identify birds, and become a bird watcher,
locate an Audubon Center near you. Meanwhile, here are
a few Birding
Basics.
For more information about Christmas Bird Count: www.audubon.org/bird/cbc
For TV producers: b-roll available
For images
and bird songs you can download
See video
of Audubon President John Flicker remarks on count in Central
Park