Happy Global Big Day!
Today is Global Big Day, when hundreds of thousands of birders from the U.S. and around the world list the birds they see and hear on the eBird app designed by the Cornell Ornithology Lab. The data they supply is used to tell people where birds are in real time and also to do cool things like have farmers flood their fields to give wetland-loving birds a place to land.
Using the information supplied by regular birders tramping through woods and fields, binoculars and phones in hand, Cornell has built a citizen science powerhouse that is actually saving the lives of hundreds of thousands perhaps millions of birds every year.
The flooded fields are one example of this. The birders' information feeds a digital map that tracks the travels of migrating species. Knowing that a flock of water birds is heading their way, farmers can flood their fields, giving the birds a temporary wetland in which to land for the night.
This concept originated with a Nature Conservancy scientist who came up with the idea of "renting habitat" instead of buying it. The flooded fields accomplish just that. But it's the eBird app that makes the flooded fields possible.
Wouldn't it be nice if more technology was like this?
(Tufted titmouse photo courtesy Cornell eBird)
Using the information supplied by regular birders tramping through woods and fields, binoculars and phones in hand, Cornell has built a citizen science powerhouse that is actually saving the lives of hundreds of thousands perhaps millions of birds every year.
The flooded fields are one example of this. The birders' information feeds a digital map that tracks the travels of migrating species. Knowing that a flock of water birds is heading their way, farmers can flood their fields, giving the birds a temporary wetland in which to land for the night.
This concept originated with a Nature Conservancy scientist who came up with the idea of "renting habitat" instead of buying it. The flooded fields accomplish just that. But it's the eBird app that makes the flooded fields possible.
Wouldn't it be nice if more technology was like this?
(Tufted titmouse photo courtesy Cornell eBird)
Labels: birds, technology
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