For my personal bird records I use a system that could provide some of the 
information required, i.e. the likelihood of seeing a particular species in 
a particular spot. Rather than just recording what birds I've seen where, I 
record the date I first saw the bird there and subtract one less than the 
date that I arrived. So if I saw the bird on the first day, it gets a score 
of 1. Over a long enough time, or a large enough number of visits by 
birders, the data can be averaged out to provide an approximation of 
probability data. For my home list, where I am present most days, the data 
is now large enough to give fairly good approximations of the likelihood of 
seeing any species. For any species not seen in the month, I give a score of 
32. Thus, if the bird is never seen, it will have an average score over time 
of 32. If it is a rare vagrant, seen once, it will end up with a score of 31 
point something. Magpies etc. that are seen nearly every day, end up with a 
score close to 1. Once the number of observation days is high enough the 
data can be subdivided and averaged such as to give a likelihood for any 
month of the year, so migrants will have a high score in June and a low one 
in November. At the moment, my personal data is only extensive enough to 
give reliable likelihood estimates for places I vist (or have visited) 
often. If all birders took up my system, I think it would go a long way to 
providing the sort of information that the originator of this thread wanted.
Paul Osborn
===============================
www.birding-aus.org
birding-aus.blogspot.com
 To unsubscribe from this mailing list, 
send the message:
unsubscribe 
(in the body of the message, with no Subject line)
to: 
===============================
 
 |