This year marks the 14 year anniversary of Vermont eBird, the first state portal for eBird. In just a decade-and-a-half, the bird checklists that bird watchers have shared have helped make Vermont eBird, a project of the Vermont Atlas of Life, the largest citizen science biodiversity project in the state and around the world.
Nearly 2,000 Vermont eBirders have submitted 218,869 complete checklists, representing all 385 species of birds ever reported from Vermont. We’ve added nearly 11,000 images and over 500 sound recordings to Vermont checklists. And we join the more than 1/3 million eBirders worldwide that have submitted 370 million bird sightings, representing 10,313 species from every country in the world!
So what did we do at eBird in 2016, and how did it go by so fast?! 2016 was a big year in many ways, bringing a more social side to eBird, allowing easy perusal of the information in the Macaulay Library at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, and much more. Here’s what made our list for 2016, broken out into different categories of impact. We are continually humbled by the amazing power and passion of the Vermont birding community, and have nothing but excitement as we look to the future of what we can do together. As we compile this list of Vermont eBird’s achievements in 2016, we are reminded that these are all truly your achievements. It is your contributions that power this knowledge engine. Every time you go out and keep a list of birds you see, you’re making a real contribution to our understanding of the world’s ever-changing avian biodiversity.
We’d also like to thank the volunteer experts that help us keep Vermont eBird data strong – Sue Elliott, Spencer Hardy, Kyle Jones, Kent McFarland, Craig Provost, and Ian Worley. Every record entered into eBird is checked for accuracy, first by automated filters that flag unusual records, and then by expert reviewers who devote their personal time to ensure that your lists and the eBird database are as accurate as possible. If you run into them while out birding, let them know you are thankful for their hard work and contribution behind the scenes at Vermont eBird.
Science and Conservation
- Continued to use eBird data to push forward with ground-breaking science to understand birds occurrence and movements at multiple scales, from local habitat use to continent-scale movements. This mesmerizing map of the migration of 118 species of Western Hemisphere birds is just one of the more visually striking examples.
- State of the Birds 2016: As in 2009 and 2011, eBird was drawn upon heavily for the 2016 State of North America’s Birds report. In this tri-national report, new STEM models have been developed to model bird abundance—used in this report to help estimate the year-round importance of specific regions on a single map. With reports like this, eBird is realizing its ultimate goal: using your bird sightings for groundbreaking science that leads to conservation action.
- Continued to provide eBird data as a free resource to anyone via our Data Download page, accessed via Explore Data. This is not to be understated, since these data downloads make much of the above possible and set eBird apart with its revolutionary open data access. More than 60,000 people have downloaded raw eBird data for analysis, with more than 2,000,000 visitors to the eBird website in 2016 to contribute and explore data.
- Published a paper in Biological Conservation, Using open access observational data for conservation action: A case study for birds, showcasing ways in which your eBird sightings have been used to inform on-the-ground conservation action across the world. Here are just 9 of the more than 150 real-world conservation applications: 9 Ways People Have Used eBird Data To Make Conservation Happen.
New Birding Tools
- Launched eBird Profile Pages, bringing a social element to eBird along with amazing personal maps of your eBirding footprint. There is now a way to see the name behind those checklists you’ve always seen—as long as the eBirder chooses to share it. More than 8,500 eBirders have created a public eBird Profile; check yours out today! We look forward to continuing to expand the social side of eBird in the months and years to come, helping create and foster a community where we can learn from each other and share sightings in increasingly better ways.
- As a followup to the resoundingly successful eBird/Macaulay Library media upload tool, we released Media Search—a way to peruse the amazing collection of photos and sounds from eBirders everywhere. This past month we gathered our 2 millionth image, all of which are freely searchable through Media Search. Warning: this tool can be dangerously addictive and enjoyable!
- Brought eBird Mobile, available on both iOS and Android, into a total of 24 languages worldwide and also added the ability to include breeding and behavior codes in your lists, submit portal-specific checklists, and use an expanded list of protocols. Stay tuned for an exciting array of new eBird Mobile tools in 2017 (preview of My eBird on mobile above!).
eBird Team and Partner Expansion
- Zeiss has allowed us to run competitions with generous gifts (new binoculars and great bird books!) to thank our eBird community for their commitment to submit observations in the best possible way. We are excited to continue our eBirder of the Month awards in 2017 and we thank everyone who participated in 2016. In 2017, will you win free Zeiss binoculars? Try taking the Checklist-a-day Challenge!
- Six new people joined the core Team eBird here at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology: Heather Wolf, who focuses on front-end development and built much of the beautiful new Birds of North America; Dave Childs, who keeps the networks and technical systems of eBird working and moving forward; Francisco Padilla, who creates our quarterly datasets for download and works on new ways to share and deliver big data volume; Jasdev Imani, who has been instrumental in creating the amazing new Merlin Photo ID tool; Iain Downie, the mastermind behind the eBird Mobile for Android improvements; and Taylor Long, a UI designer and front-end developer, who has been working on exciting new ways to explore eBird’s interactive species distribution models.
2016 eBird Growth
- Through the time of this writing, 370 million bird sightings have been entered into eBird. This includes more than 84 million in 2016 alone; with 11,843,651 coming from just the month of May. The total from May is more observations than were collected in eBird’s first FIVE YEARS combined. eBird’s contributions make up close to half of all of the biodiversity in the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF). See the eBird GBIF dataset here.
- The second Global Big Day set a new bar for birding’s biggest day. On 14 May 2016, 17,300 birders collectively noted 6,333 species of bird, reporting 47,000 checklists from 151 countries. Vermont eBirders found 182 species in Vermont alone! Mark your calendar for next year’s Global Big Day: 13 May 2017.
- Added new languages for the eBird website—Norwegian and Ukrainian—while also adding bird names to now support more than 50 languages and regional versions. See a full list of our eBird Common Names here.
It has been an incredibly exciting year, and we can’t wait to see what we can build together with you in 2017.
Well done, VCE. So proud of the work you do, Kent.