2010 GBBC News Release
For release: September 25,
2009
Get the release as a PDF
Take a Mid-Winter Nature Break With the
Great Backyard Bird Count
February 12-15, 2010
New
York, NY and Ithaca, NY—Bird watchers coast to coast are invited
to take part in the 13th annual Great Backyard Bird Count, Friday,
February 12, through Monday, February 15, 2010. Participants in
the free event will join tens of thousands of volunteers of all levels
of birding experience to count birds in their own backyards, local
parks or wildlife refuges.
Each checklist submitted by these "citizen scientists" helps researchers at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and the National Audubon Society learn more about how the birds are doing—and how to protect them. Last year, participants turned in more than 93,600 checklists online, creating the continent's largest instantaneous snapshot of bird populations ever recorded.
“Taking part in the Great Backyard Bird Count is a great way to get outside with family and friends, have fun, and help birds—all at the same time. Anyone who can identify even a few species can provide important information that enables scientists to learn more about how the environment is changing and how that affects our conservation priorities,” said Audubon Education Vice President, Judy Braus. “Everyone who participates in the GBBC—families, teachers, and young people—will get a chance to hone their observation skills, learn more about birds, and make a great contribution to the future!”
Anyone can take part in the Great Backyard Bird Count,
from novice bird watchers to experts. Participants count birds for as
little as 15 minutes (or as long as they wish) on one or more days of
the event and report their sightings online at www.birdcount.org. One 2009
participant said, “Thank you for the opportunity to participate in
citizen science. I have had my eyes opened to a whole new interest and
I love it!”
“The GBBC is a perfect first step towards the sort of intensive
monitoring needed to discover how birds are responding to environmental
change,” said Janis Dickinson, the director of Citizen Science at the
Cornell Lab. “Winter is such a vulnerable period for birds, so winter
bird distributions are likely to be very sensitive to change. There is
only one way—citizen science—to gather data on private lands where
people live and doing this across the continent over many years. GBBC
has enormous potential both as an early warning system and in capturing
and engaging people in more intensive sampling of birds across the
landscape.”
Bird populations are always shifting and changing. For
example, 2009 GBBC data highlighted a huge southern invasion of Pine
Siskins across much of the eastern United States. Participants counted
279,469 Pine Siskins on 18,528 checklists, as compared to the previous
high of 38,977 birds on 4,069 checklists in 2005. Failure of seed crops
farther north caused the siskins to move south to find their favorite
food.
On the www.birdcount.org
website, participants can explore real-time maps and charts that show
what others are reporting during the count. The site has tips to help
identify birds and special materials for educators. Participants may
also enter the GBBC photo contest by uploading images taken during the
count. Many images will be featured in the GBBC website’s photo
gallery. All participants are entered in a drawing for prizes that
include bird feeders, binoculars, books, CDs, and many other great
birding products.
For more information about the GBBC, visit the website at www.birdcount.org. Or contact the
Cornell Lab of Ornithology at (800) 843-2473 or (outside the U.S., call
(607) 254-2473) or gbbc@cornell.edu, or Audubon at citizenscience@audubon.org
or (215) 355-9588, Ext 16.
The Great Backyard Bird Count is made possible, in part, by generous
support from Wild Birds
Unlimited.
#
Images by 2009 GBBC participants: Black-capped Chickadee by Rodney Smith, WA; Bird watcher at window by Terie Rawn, NY; Pine Siskins by Steve Gillespie, WV.
Editors: Please go the GBBC News
Room for high-resolution images, top-10 lists, FAQS, and results of
the 2009 count. To interview a participant in your area, please get in
touch with one of the media contacts listed below.
Contacts:
-
Pat Leonard, Cornell Lab of Ornithology, (607) 254-2137, pel27@cornell.edu
-
Delta Willis, Audubon, (212) 979-3197, dwillis@audubon.org
The Cornell Lab of Ornithology is a nonprofit membership institution interpreting and conserving the earth’s biological diversity through research, education, and citizen science focused on birds. Visit the Cornell Lab’s website at www.birds.cornell.edu.
Audubon is dedicated to protecting birds and other wildlife and the habitat that supports them. Our national network of community-based nature centers and chapters, scientific and educational programs, and advocacy on behalf of areas sustaining important bird populations, engage millions of people of all ages and backgrounds in conservation. www.audubon.org









