Post by Gord on Oct 24, 2006 20:14:19 GMT -8
Dear Birders:
Bird Studies Canada launched eBird Canada today at the web site www.ebird.ca.
This is a Canadian version of the popular Cornell Lab of Ornithology program begun in 2002 and significantly upgraded in 2005. eBird is an on-line bird sightings database where you can enter your sightings through custom checklists, then view the results of yours and other eBirders' contributions through maps,
graphs and tables. The geographical extent of the database now covers Canada, the United States, Mexico and parts of the Caribbean; future plans include the rest of Latin America.
More than 6 million records are submitted annually to eBird and the Canadian part of the database includes more than 400,000 records. This total is climbing rapidly, especially since a bulk upload tool was developed. This tool allows anyone to upload records from bird sightings databases in almost any format,
including AviSys, BirdBase, Excel, and Access. Contact me for more details!
The eBird database also includes records from club projects such as the Northwest Territories & Nunavut Checklist Project, the Squamish Estuary Conservation Society's monthly counts, regular censuses at Maplewood Flats and migration monitoring totals at the Vaseux Lake Bird Observatory.
Please pass this message on to anyone who may be interested.
Check it out at www.ebird.ca!
Regards
Dick Cannings
Bird Studies Canada - Études d'Oiseaux Canada
eBird Canada
1330 Debeck Road
Site 11, Comp. 96, RR#1
Naramata, BC, V0H 1N0
250-496-4049
Bird Studies Canada launched eBird Canada today at the web site www.ebird.ca.
This is a Canadian version of the popular Cornell Lab of Ornithology program begun in 2002 and significantly upgraded in 2005. eBird is an on-line bird sightings database where you can enter your sightings through custom checklists, then view the results of yours and other eBirders' contributions through maps,
graphs and tables. The geographical extent of the database now covers Canada, the United States, Mexico and parts of the Caribbean; future plans include the rest of Latin America.
More than 6 million records are submitted annually to eBird and the Canadian part of the database includes more than 400,000 records. This total is climbing rapidly, especially since a bulk upload tool was developed. This tool allows anyone to upload records from bird sightings databases in almost any format,
including AviSys, BirdBase, Excel, and Access. Contact me for more details!
The eBird database also includes records from club projects such as the Northwest Territories & Nunavut Checklist Project, the Squamish Estuary Conservation Society's monthly counts, regular censuses at Maplewood Flats and migration monitoring totals at the Vaseux Lake Bird Observatory.
Please pass this message on to anyone who may be interested.
Check it out at www.ebird.ca!
Regards
Dick Cannings
Bird Studies Canada - Études d'Oiseaux Canada
eBird Canada
1330 Debeck Road
Site 11, Comp. 96, RR#1
Naramata, BC, V0H 1N0
250-496-4049