Here are a few answers to Larry's musings.
The "Explore a Region" tool tells us that 199,166 complete checklists
have been submitted to eBird for Vermont as of 11:01 this morning.
In the "Explore a Region"click on Hotspots and you will find the highest
number of species at the Dead Creek WMA IBA hotspot (242) and many, many
hotspots with greater than 150 species reported (and surely there are
many non-hotspot personal locations and home lists with greater than 150
species).
The top ten hotspots for species reported are:
Dead Creek WMA IBA
242
Herrick's Cove IBA
226
Dead Creek WMA IBA--Brilyea Access
220
Delta Park IBA
217
Button Bay State Park
206
Charlotte Town Beach
206
Shelburne Bay
205
Retreat Meadows / West River Mouth
202
Lake Runnemede / Evarts Pond - (62 acres) - Paradise Park
198
Missisquoi NWR IBA
195
The Top 100 list (which ONLY includes eBird records) has these
individuals with the longest species lists:
1 David Hoag 344
2 Craig Provost 319
3 Fred Pratt 318
4 Jim Mead 311
The eBird Top 100 list for eBird checklists has these folks with the
most eBird submissions of complete checklists:
1 Ian Worley 10379
2 Craig Provost 8214
3 Susan Elliott 6479
4 Ron Payne 5624
(Note that there is not always a correlation between numbers of species
recorded by a person and numbers of checklists submitted. Vermont
birders have lots of different interests and thus different birding habits.)
Some of the other categories Larry mentions can be obtained with not too
much analytical work from eBird. And others are good projects for
analysts with a fair amount of time on their hands.
As for other questions to add to the list of curiosities, I'll start the
additions with these: I'd love to see a list of individuals according
to the numbers of years they have been birding in Vermont (we have some
amazing folks that should be recognized!). I'd love to discover what
are the most common ages at which persons started birding. What are the
longest, continuously and regularly monitored sites? What are the
largest numbers of species discovered on 24 hour "big days"?
Ian
===============================================
On 5/24/2016 10:50 AM, Larry and Mona Rogers wrote:
> E Bird is a great success in Vermont. I don’t know how many sightings have been reported over the years – they must run into the thousands. I’m sure Kent could tell us.
> While E Bird is unsurpassed for finding information on individual species with dates, counts and locations, other data could probably be mined from its vast data base. For instance:
>
> • What are the top ten locations in Vermont for generating E Bird reports? I might guess the West Rutland Swamp, Mount Philo, Shelburne Bay, Mount Mansfield, Pearl Street in Brandon, etc., but I really don’t know. The list could be titled “Vermont’s Ten Most Birded Spots”.
> • Which locations in Vermont have generated the largest number of individual species reports? Are there places where over 150 species have been sighted? 100? 75?
> • Which Vermont birders are the most active E Bird contributors?
> • What are the ten rarest birds spotted in Vermont? I think of Whooping Crane, Painted Bunting, Black-Tailed Gull, Golden-Crowned Sparrow, the currently visiting Prothonotary Warbler and several others. Selection criteria might be single species sightings from a specific location over a relatively short time interval.
> • At the other end of the spectrum, what are the most commonly reported species either by number of E Bird reports containing them, or by total count of individuals? Chickadee, House Sparrow, Crow, Starling, Blue Jay? The list might be called “The Trash Birds of Vermont”.
>
> Anyhow, I’m sure other folks could suggest other lists. It might be interesting.
>
> Larry the Compulsive Lister
>
>
> Sent from Mail for Windows 10
|