Feature - Pennsylvania Birders Still Needed to Help With Atlas
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By Joe Kosack, Wildlife Conservation Education Specialist, Surprises are surfacing in an ongoing survey - the largest ever - of wild birds that nest over the Commonwealth's more than 46,000-square-mile landscape. The historic 2nd Pennsylvania Breeding Bird Atlas has been underway for three years now and is on course to be completed in 2008. Nearly 2,100 Pennsylvanians have volunteered to participate in this massive summer undertaking; 400 volunteers joined this year. And just in case you might be interested, more help is needed. "We've come a long way since the atlas begin in 2004, and much good has been accomplished for bird conservation and specifically the Pennsylvania Game Commission, which manages the state's wild birds," said Dan Brauning, agency wildlife diversity program supervisor. "But, with two years to go, and some substantial holes to fill in this important work, the Atlas surely could use help from more interested individuals, particularly along the Since its start, more than 300,000 breeding records have been entered by participants, who have logged more than 50,000 hours casing the Commonwealth's forests, fields and suburbs. In this fieldwork, the state has been divided into 4,937 survey blocks. Volunteers have reported observations or nesting accounts in about 70 percent of the blocks, which means no work has occurred in more than 1,100 blocks. More than 75 breeding birds have been confirmed in many blocks, particularly surrounding urban centers such as Those areas of "We could definitely use some help in But even those not in one of the aforementioned counties can get involved with the Breeding Bird Atlas. In fact, atlas organizers are hoping to double - possibly triple - the number of people participating in the census over the next two years. "Backyard birders are in a position to add thousands of valuable records that normally occur on their properties and this will add another dimension to the atlas," Mulvihill stressed. "We're interested in confirming the Survey information can be documented on-line, or forms can be filled out and returned to Atlas organizer's offices. Backyard forms - primarily for casual observers, or individuals without computer access - are available by calling 724-593-6022. More information on the project or how to participate is available on the Breeding Bird Atlas website. A special form also has been developed for "While bobolinks and meadowlarks are becoming more difficult to find, many of these birds are well known to those who spend countless hours outdoors working on farms in spring and summer," Mulvihill explained. "We want and need the help of farmers, so that when the atlas is completed, it will reflect the value of farmlands to The robin leads the list of birds most frequently observed by atlas participants. It is followed by the song sparrow, crow, red-eyed vireo and yellowthroat. One of the more interesting highlights in this year's fieldwork has been confirmation of the state's first-ever breeding pair of merlins in a planted pine and spruce grove in downtown "It's such a surprising discovery," Brauning said. "We had no idea. Interestingly, there also was a nesting pair of merlins in an adjacent atlas block, and a third pair was nesting in "This important discovery underscores the atlas' need for more eyes and ears to help collect information on the more than 200 wild bird species that frequent Record numbers of the state-endangered dickcissel and sedge wren were recorded in southern Also this year, atlas participants in select blocks - almost 100 - began surveying owls and marsh birds with nocturnal and wetland surveys. The nightshift fieldwork turned up 23 saw-whet owls, three barn owls, one short-eared owl and one long-eared owl, as well as nine whip-poor-wills and one common snipe. The wetland work uncovered 11 The 2nd Pennsylvania Breeding Bird Atlas is the most extensive survey of the state's nesting birds ever attempted. Started in 2004, the grid-based survey - which provides visitors and participants "real time" atlas tabulations on birds and blocks covered - will continue for two more years and aims to track the changes that have occurred in bird populations since the first atlas was completed in 1989. Since that time, eagles, ospreys and peregrine falcons have expanded their breeding numbers substantially. Also of interest will be charting whether the long-term declines of many songbirds reported in the first atlas continue. Although it follows and largely replicates the first atlas, conducted in When finished in 2008, the second Atlas will show changes in the occurrence and distribution of the state's nesting wild birds, and promises to provide much additional information about the state's breeding birds, including their habitat preferences and abundance. The use of technologies, such as global positioning satellites and the internet - unavailable when data for the first Atlas was collected - are expected to improve the survey. But success in getting to the finish line and the quantity and quality of data collected will be directly influenced by the number of volunteers who participate, especially covering blocks in rural Additional funding for the Atlas has been provided by the state Department of Conservation and Natural Resources' Wild Resource Conservation Fund, and in-kind and other assistance is being provided by DCNR's bureaus of Forestry and State Parks, Pennsylvania Audubon, Pennsylvania Society for Ornithology, Penn State Cooperative Wetlands Center, Penn State Institutes of the Environment, Penn State School of Forest Resources, Powdermill Nature Reserve and Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology. For more information, visit the 2nd Pennsylvania Breeding Bird Atlas website. NewsClip: DCNR Dedicates Raptor Observation Facility at Fort Washington |
10/7/2006 |
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