Results: Annual Summaries
The Contents of American Birds, Summary of the 101st Christmas Bird Count,
December 14, 2000 to January 5, 2001
What
a difference a century has made! In December of 1900, early
conservationists were gearing up for the first-ever "Christmas
Bird Census," responding to the call of Frank Chapman
to count, not shoot, birds as a holiday tradition. The concept
of "bird-watching" was only the passing fancy of
a few people, and the term "birding" was at least
one human generation away from being coined. Early bird counters
perhaps wondered when their ranks would break 100, or if the
whole idea of a Christmas Bird Count would catch on at all--or
have any value. The anticipation they felt may have been to
help define the wintering ranges of Black-capped versus Carolina
chickadees, and perhaps in the New York City area to encounter
a northward straggling Tufted Titmouse or Northern Cardinal.
It wasn't out of the question to think of finding a Heath
Hen or an Ivory-billed Woodpecker, although their numbers
were dwindling. Some counts may have been started to check
for species such as these. It was completely out of the question
to consider reporting birds that had left for the winter--like
Swainson's Thrush or Blackburnian Warbler. In 1900 those early
Christmas bird counters were on the cutting edge of bird conservation,
and the organization that eventually chose the name "National
Audubon Society" was still five years away from being
formed.
In
December of the year 2000, the picture was quite different.
The "Christmas Bird Census" had long been called
the Christmas Bird Count, and for the first time Bird Studies
Canada joined the National Audubon Society in organizing the
entire effort The number of count circles is pushing steadily
toward 2000 each season, and over 50,000 birders take part
every year. The CBC is well ensconced as The Icon for the
study of early winter bird distribution, and coverage now
extends from above the Arctic Circle to southern South America.
Ivory-billed Woodpeckers are long gone, but Ivory-billed Woodcreepers
are now counted each year. In the first season of the second
century of the Christmas Bird Count we are tracking the demise
of other prairie-chickens--at Attwater Prairie Chicken N.W.R.,
Texas and Arnett, Oklahoma--as they appear to be following
their cousin the Heath Hen into oblivion. And CBC observers
in Ecuador looked forward to a day that would include Stygian
Owl, Green-fronted Lancebill and Sword-billed Hummingbird
(from the sublime to the ridiculous for hummingbird bills),
Golden-headed Quetzal, Moustached Antpitta, Andean Cock-of-the-Rock,
and Scarlet-bellied Mountain-Tanager. And yes, they did also
find Swainson's Thrush and Blackburnian Warbler among their
total of 348 species. And at the opposite end of the spectrum,
observers at Prudhoe Bay, Alaska tallied a new record number
(for their count) of the only species ever found there--73
Common Ravens.
In
the 101st Christmas Bird Count, a new record high total of
1880 circles was censused, with 1533 in the United States,
297 in Canada, and 50 in the Caribbean, Latin America, and
Pacific Islands. It took quite a few new circles to reach
that total, and the complete list of the new Christmas Bird
Counts included in the 101st Count are to be seen in Table
1. Not surprisingly, 28 of these new CBC's are in Canada,
the result of the much-appreciated efforts of Bird Studies
Canada. Dick Cannings and the BSC team spearheaded CBC efforts
in Canada, and it is certain that the Christmas Bird Count
is a stronger program with Bird Studies Canada onboard. All
told 51,637 observers took part--42,359 in the field and 9278
dedicated feeder watchers. Despite the record number of Counts
included this season, that impressive participant total is
slightly lower than in the 100th Count--probably because of
the weather effects discussed below. The participant break-down
is not surprising: 1012 field observers and seven feeder watchers
counted in the Caribbean, Latin America, and the Pacific Islands;
6523 field observers and 3963 feeder watchers did their part
in Canada; and the remaining 34,799 bush beaters and 5306
feeder fillers participated in the United States.
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| Gulls
in winter provide an identification challenge to many
observers. However, a rarity in direct comparison with
a common species can provide helpful hints. This duo of
Herring Gull (Larus argentatus) and Lesser Black-backed
Gull (Larus fuscus) was present during count
week in the Coastal New Hampshire circle. Photo/Steve
Mirick. |
And
count birds they did! Despite often inclement conditions,
54,788,215 birds of all manner of species were tallied: 51,657,566
in the U.S.; 2,908,401 in Canada; and 222,248 on the "Tropical"
counts. In North America, one new species was added to the
cumulative roster--Golden-cheeked Warbler at San Antonio,
Texas. Many species are new from Latin America, but remember
with the incredible diversity of species in the neotropics,
each new count, and usually each season, brings additions
to the total list from those regions. Two other new names,
both waterfowl, grace this 101st CBC issue-- Long-tailed Duck
and Greylag Goose. Long-tailed Duck is a new (for the A.O.U.)
name for an old friend--Oldsquaw, counted every year since
1900. The Europeans among CBC participants may now rejoice
that North American ornithologists finally have that name
correct! The other new inclusion is Greylag Goose--reported
on at least two CBC's this season, although the origin of
the birds is nearly certainly from farmyard stock It's possible,
however, that someday a "real" wild Greylag Goose
could occur in the Western Hemisphere, and by keeping track
of the sightings of feral birds we may learn when the real
thing shows up.
All
told, in the 101st CBC 689 species were tallied in the United
States (including Hawaii) and Canada, with an additional 39
recognized forms included as well. In the high species count
race, North American tops again goes to Mad Island Marsh,
Texas, tying the all-time North American (north of Mexico)
high of 235 hard-won species. Former perennial favorite Freeport,
Texas also had a stellar year, at an impressive 226 species.
South of the border, a newcomer CBC tops the list--Mindo-Tandayapa,
in incredibly species-diverse Ecuador, at 348 species. La
Selva and Monteverde, both in Costa Rica, tallied 344 and
342, and the Pacific Canal Area in Panama tallied an amazing
(to those of us in the frozen north) 328 species. A total
of 1796 species of birds was tallied outside United States
and Canada--of course, this includes many birds also seen
on North American counts. It also includes a very nice sample
of birds that breed in North America, but winter in the New
World Tropics and farther south. The complete list of all
counts tallying 150 or more species is seen in Table
2. And, as each and every one of the over 50,000 counters
knows, it takes major observer effort to count "all the
birds in your circle." Table
3 lists all the Counts in the 101st CBC with 100 or more
total observers.
The
101st CBC season was, in general, a very difficult one weather-wise.
From the Canadian Atlantic Provinces to the Prairie Provinces,
and southward to the Carolinas, Arkansas, and the Great Plains
States, winter had North America in its icy grasp. Not only
was the weather cold before and during the 101st CBC period,
but across much of the Continent there were storms on each
weekend of the Count Period. The Rocky Mountains seemed to
contain the cold weather to the east; throughout the mountain
west and along the West Coast, conditions were often warm--and
very dry. Predictably, the weather affected both birds and
birders on a Continental basis. Although there was a record
high number of counts conducted, many had to be re-scheduled--only
to be run on their "rain date" in bad weather after
all. On many counts, the number of human observers was reduced.
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| An
unusual in winter raptor at many localities across North
America, this Red-shouldered Hawk (Buteo lineatus)
was photographed at Ogden, Utah. Photo/V. Arnold Smith. |
The
birds responded to the weather conditions as well. Many lingering
migrants and half-hardy species were forced southward or were
present in reduced numbers, and waterfowl and shorebirds were
nearly nonexistent on Christmas Bird Counts in many northern
areas where they occasionally linger. Counts conducted to
the mild south and west may have benefited, as witnessed by
increased species totals in Texas and California this season.
Comparing the species totals in Table
4, the list of Regional High Species totals in the 101st
CBC, with those in Table
4 from the 100th Count (with its continentally mild conditions)
illustrates this pattern. As any Compiler well knows, calculating
accurate species totals is a bit of an art, and again in the
101st Count the CBC data entry pages did not have an auto-calculation
feature for number of species. We are in the midst of developing
a system of linkages of obsolete species names throughout
the historical CBC database, and when that is complete the
system will calculate species totals for Compilers.
Not
surprisingly after last season's flight, there was no large
"winter finch" movement in the 101st Count, although
Bohemian Waxwings did stage a good flight into some regions.
The event of the winter, presaged by CBC results in Canada,
Alaska, and Minnesota, was a large movement of Northern Hawk
Owls, and smaller numbers of Boreal, Snowy, and Great Gray
owls. Gyrfalcons also moved southward, and provided raptorial
spice on more CBC's than in some seasons. Also, the dry conditions
in the mountain west may have accounted for a movement into
the lowlands and eastward of some western species, such as
Western Scrub-Jay, Pinyon Jay, and Black-headed Grosbeak.
Northern Bobwhite numbers continue to plummet across North
America--even though introductions for hunting stock take
place in many areas. The real picture of what is happening
to eastern North America's only native quail is far from clear.
In fact, most North American quail species are declining.
On the other hand, North America's largest game bird, the
Wild Turkey, is reclaiming the continent with great vigor,
and this season's increasing CBC tallies from North Carolina
to British Columbia reflected their ballooning numbers.
Another reintroduction that is being monitored by the Christmas
Bird Count as of this 101st season is that of the California
Condor to its former haunts near the Grand Canyon. Observers
on the Silver Reef, Utah count tallied one bird from this
release program. The future of this magnificent vulture anywhere
in the wild is far from certain, but the CBC provides one
tool to monitor it success or failure, in both the Grand Canyon
area and in southern California.
Another significant avian event documented by the 101st Count
was a huge flight of Lapland Longspurs and Horned Larks in
the central Great Plains and into the mid-South. It is unclear
whether these birds were forced southward from the brutal
conditions to the north, or were fleeing the drought conditions
in Texas and other areas of the southwest. But record numbers
of Lapland Longspurs were counted in Tennessee, Mississippi,
Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, and Arkansas. Horned Larks were
tallied in record totals in Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, and
Montana. Harris's Sparrow was also unusually widespread away
from its normal wintering ground in the southern Great Plains--possibly
as a result of the same factors inducing the movement of Horned
Larks and Lapland Longspurs.
Again this season, in Table
5 we take a look at a few species of interest. As has
become something of a mini-tradition in itself, Grasshopper
Sparrow is first on the list. Contrary to what might be expected
given the dismal weather over much of the continent during
the 101st Christmas Bird Count period, this was a good season
for this little skulker. Or at least it was a good season
for observers to find Grasshopper Sparrows--an art in itself.
Grasshopper Sparrows were found on 85 Counts in 17 regions,
with a very high (for Christmas Bird Counts) total of 440
birds. In fact, more Grasshopper Sparrows were found in Texas
on the 101st CBC (279 birds on 33 Counts) than the entire
total 100th season. It seems likely that on a continental
basis, Grasshopper Sparrows elected to move south with the
cold fall and early winter, ahead of the snow and ice storms.
Interestingly, however, no Grasshopper Sparrows were found
on CBC's in New Mexico, where they are usually present in
good numbers. Adding to the mystery, the weather generally
provided good counting conditions in New Mexico during the
101st Count, so it seems unlikely that the little sparrows
were just missed. One factor could be the ongoing drought
conditions in New Mexico--possibly the numbers of Grasshopper
Sparrows were bolstered in the Lone Star State by birds that
elected not to winter in the Land of Enchantment.
The
next species presented for analysis in Table
5 is the ever-enigmatic Bohemian Waxwing. In the 101st
Count, these lovely frugivores were tallied in the same number
of regions (31) and in 50 fewer circles (237 vs. 280), but
in greater numbers (102,164 vs. 95,620) than in the 100th
Count. But the key is where they were counted in big numbers
this season--in Manitoba, Alberta, British Columbia, Alaska,
and Montana. Interestingly, there were also large numbers
of American Robins in British Columbia--another species dependent
upon the availability of winter fruits as a food source. So
it seems that the Bohemian Waxwings did not have to wander
far in the winter of 2000-2001, staying in the north central
regions of the North American continent. The winter conditions
were harsh, with heavy snow cover, storms, and extreme cold,
but a good crop of winter's fruits frozen on the trees made
for more of an attractant than the weather was a repellent
for this hardy species. Even in the face of cold conditions
(at least by human standards), there is no need for entire
populations of birds to undertake movements on a continental
scale when food is available on their local home turf.
The next bird documented in Table
5 from the 101st Count is a species that was notable by
its absence this past season--Common Redpoll. We have tended
to look at irruptive species when they are present in a given
Christmas Bird Count season, but it is quite illustrative
also to look at such species in their "off years,"
thereby documenting the magnitude of the fluctuations in their
numbers. Like the Bohemian Waxwings, Common Redpolls stayed
home in the 101st Count--if home is defined as the breeding
grounds. The only region that had more Common Redpolls in
the 101st Count than in the 100th was Alaska. In total less
than half as many individual CBC's tallied Common Redpolls
this season as compared to last. But the most telling statistic
is the total number of Common Redpolls counted--a paltry 12,368
in the 101st Count compared to over 135,000 in the 100th Count.
The supply of small seeds in the far north must have been
very good indeed during the winter of 2000-2001, illustrating
that temperatures and snow cover usually have little bearing
on the irruptive movements of seed-eating Fringillid finches.
Observers should keep their eyes peeled for redpolls during
the upcoming 102nd Count season, however, as this group seems
to stage its winter movements on a biannual cycle. It will
be interesting to see the scope of any redpoll irruption in
the next season, and whether the birds move in the same direction
and with the same magnitude as they did two years earlier
in the 100th Count.
Finally
in Table 5, we look
at the dominant bird (when present) at the sunflower seed
feeder, the Evening Grosbeak. This is a species that should
be well sampled by the Christmas Bird Count, and as documented
by the CBC database online the apparent long-term decline
in this species' numbers is disturbing. In the 101st Count,
fair numbers of Evening Grosbeaks were turned up, although
all numbers were somewhat down from the 100th Count. Since
Evening Grosbeaks did not move in big numbers in the winter
finch flight last season, this comparative result is not too
surprising. It is interesting to note that while there was
no large-scale movement of Evening Grosbeaks in the 101st
Count, the numbers were up somewhat in the west, especially
in the southern Rockies and the Pacific Northwest. So where
are the Evening Grosbeaks? Are they remaining in the northern
forests, where there are few Christmas Bird Count circles?
Or is this species actually declining, responding to some
as yet unidentified environmental factor? This species is
easy to identify both by sight and voice, and is conspicuous
when present. It is also a frequent visitor to feeding stations,
to the (at least initial) delight of their human hosts. The
Christmas Bird Count will continue to be a valuable tool to
monitor the status of the Evening Grosbeak--and the early
winter distribution of hundreds of other species of birds.
 |
| Similar
in many ways to the Old World "crakes" is the
Sora (Porzana carolina). This Sora was accompanied
by a typical New World rail (a Virginia) at Grenada, Mississippi.
Photo/Bruce Reid. |
The
101st Christmas Bird Count--the initial season in the second
century of the Count--has helped chart the course for the
future of the CBC. Beginning with this season, all CBC results
were handled via on-line data entry--not just those in North
America. Compilers from the Caribbean to Ecuador to Saipan
all entered their data on-line, accessing a comprehensive
new series of bird lists in an improved database structure.
In the upcoming Christmas Bird Count seasons, working with
groups in Mexico and the Caribbean (much like the highly successful
collaboration with Bird Studies Canada), we hope to expand
the CBC program in those regions. In addition, with the help
of those groups and other Compilers we hope to develop the
historical database for the non-North American Counts by entering
CBC results from past seasons into the on-line database.
We are also in the midst of a complete overhaul of the on-line
presence of the Christmas Bird Count. In addition to streamlining
the data entry pages for Compilers, soon we will have a host
of new on-line features that will give the public access to
the CBC database as never before. Through an interactive web
presence birders and researchers will be able to query the
database, answering many of their own questions about avian
long-term trends or patterns of early winter distribution.
People will have options for downloading CBC data directly
from the CBC website, so that Compilers or researchers can
pull data into their computers and do further studies off
line. We will welcome hearing the results any studies that
are conducted.
We
are also beginning to "mine" the Christmas Bird
Count for ornithological stories of note, hoping to unearth
both the good bird news and the bad that is embedded in 101
years of mostly untapped census data. There have already been
on-line features looking at early winter range expansions
(Tufted Titmouse and Great- and Boat-tailed grackles), irruptive
patterns (Pine Siskins and other winter finches), and apparent
population declines (Bewick's Wren and Evening Grosbeak).
These stories are certainly only the tip of the proverbial
research iceberg that the Christmas Bird Count will provide
to ornithology and conservation biology once it is fully available
and searchable. What questions come to mind that might be
addressed by research into the Christmas Bird Count database?
We would love to hear about them. As more such studies are
completed, we will add new stories to our on-line library
of CBC research features. In addition, we will soon have available
on-line the ever-expanding bibliography of studies conducted
and published that have used CBC data to reach their findings.
This will be a valuable resource for researchers and conservationists,
and will also highlight for Compilers and participants the
true value of all their dedicated efforts in the field.
The
future of the Christmas Bird Count is bright indeed, and that
future is both in the field and in cyberspace. The dedicated
cadre of CBC participants, and the tradition of the Count
and spirit of competition they bring with them, ensures that
the program will flourish and grow. And the Internet provides
the tool whereby the bird data that result from their efforts--your
efforts--can best be appreciated, accessed, and analyzed.
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| Perhaps
the most frequently encountered rail on North American
Christmas Bird counts is the Virginia Rail (Rallus
limicola). This one was present at Grenada, Mississippi.
Photo/Bruce Reid. |
Roughly three generations of humans have
been involved in counting birds on the Christmas Bird Count
(or Census), and they have watched many more generations of
birds. The environmental conditions in North America have
changed over the past century, in ways that positively and
negatively affect both humans and our avian neighbors. Birds
provide humans with one way of monitoring the world we've
impacted, as they can be used as indicator species for the
health of the environment. On this basis, the Christmas Bird
Count itself has evolved into a powerful and important tool,
one probably inconceivable to any of the 27 participants on
the first Christmas Bird Census in 1900. With the continually
growing ornithological value of the Count in combination with
the amazing communication power of the Internet, it seems
likely that today's participants cannot possibly fathom the
future value of their efforts in the year 2100 and beyond.
—Geoffrey S. LeBaron
|