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Media contact: David Bonter
607/254-2457,
email
Photos available at bottom of page.
Counting
on bird counters in the Southeast
Participants
needed for 20th season of Project FeederWatch
Ithaca,
NY, October, 2006-- Northern Cardinals were reported
at more feeders in the Southeast last winter than any other
species. Close behind in the rankings were Mourning Dove,
American Goldfinch, Carolina Chickadee, and Tufted Titmouse.
These rankings are based on reports to Project FeederWatch,
a popular citizen-science project from the Cornell Lab of
Ornithology that helps answer questions about bird populations.
According to project leader David Bonter, counts were below
normal last winter. “A lot of people from Florida
and the Carolinas, west to Arkansas, Mississippi, and Louisiana
reported fewer birds at the start of the last FeederWatch
season. That may have been a result of the relatively mild
temperatures,” said Bonter. Feeder activity did pick
up as the winter progressed but numbers of some species
were still markedly lower than normal, including Blue Jays,
Dark-eyed Juncos, and Northern Flickers.
On the positive side, FeederWatchers reported record numbers
of Chipping Sparrows, Eastern Bluebirds, and White-winged
Doves last winter. They also found a few rarities in the
Southeast. “Some western hummingbirds spent the winter
in Virginia and Florida instead of going to their normal
wintering areas in Central America, and there was a Bullock’s
Oriole visiting a feeder in Tallahassee when it should have
been in Mexico,” said Bonter.
Project FeederWatch participants have submitted more than
1.1 million checklists to date, helping scientists track
changes in bird populations and distribution. People of
all ages and skill levels are welcome to participate. To
learn more about Project FeederWatch or to register, visit
www.birds.cornell.edu/pfw or call the Lab toll-free at (800)
843-2473. In return for the $15 fee ($12 for Lab members)
participants receive the FeederWatcher’s Handbook,
a poster of the most common feeder birds, a calendar, complete
instructions on filing reports, a subscription to the Lab’s
newsletter, BirdScope, and the FeederWatch Winter Bird Highlights.
The season runs from November 11 to April 6, and participants
may join at any time.
“It’s our 20th year,” said Bonter, “and
we’re counting on citizen scientists to help us track
birds for the next 20 years.”
Note:
The following photos may be published along with the press
release without further permission. Other uses are prohibited.
Please provide photographer credits. Contacts with local
participants may be available upon request. Contact David
Bonter at (607) 254-2457 or email.
Click
on photos to enlarge.

House Finch by Jeff & Cheryl Hurd.

American
Goldfinches by Leora Worthington.

Join Now!!
The Cornell
Lab of Ornithology is a nonprofit membership institution interpreting and conserving the
earths biological diversity through research, education, and citizen science focused
on birds. |