Watchers outdid themselves during the 2008 Great Backyard Bird Count, sponsored by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and the National Audubon Society.
Participants submitted more than 85,700 checklists during the four-day event, Feb. 15-18, surpassing last year’s all-time record by several thousand. Participants also identified a record 635 species and sent in thousands of stunning bird images from around the continent.
Birders who had heard about the massive seed production failure in trees across northern Canada were expecting a huge influx of northern finches coming south to look for food. “As predicted, there were record numbers of GBBC reports for Pine Grosbeak,” says Rob Fergus, Senior Scientist with the National Audubon Society. It was also a banner year for Common Redpolls and Evening Grosbeaks, reported in their highest numbers in several years.
In this year’s GBBC, Yellow-billed Magpie numbers hit a new low. Magpies, crows, and jays are especially susceptible to the West Nile virus. For the past few years the population of Yellow-billed Magpies has declined following the spread of the virus to California. Nationwide, American Crow and Blue Jay numbers appear to have stabilized somewhat, but bear continued monitoring as the populations of these birds continue to adapt to the presence of this new disease.
The GBBC charts the explosive geographic expansion of Eurasian Collared-Doves.
The species has spread aggressively since it was introduced in Florida in 1980 and made new inroads this year.
For the first time, GBBC records of this bird came from British Columbia, Manitoba, and Oregon.
Some species showed up in Great Backyard Bird Count reports for the very first time, including a Masked Duck in Texas, a bird that is usually found in the tropics.
Top 10 most-reported birds in Valdosta the 2008 GBBC:
1) Canada Goose
2) Chipping Sparrow
3) Northern Cardinal
4) American Goldfinch
5) Song Sparrow
6) Snowy Egret
7) House Sparrow
8) House Finch
9) Mourning Dove
10) White Ibis
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Bird count sets new records
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