birding-aus

Rare Bird Alerts

To: birding aus <>
Subject: Rare Bird Alerts
From: Russell Woodford <>
Date: Mon, 26 Jul 2010 23:15:32 +1000
Hi everyone

This is an interesting issue, and probably a frustrating one for a lot of people. In the "information age" we are used to getting the information we want immediately, so it is understandable that people expect this sort of service from rare bird alerts. And sometimes they will get it - whether it's from email, SMS, recorded message service, pager, Google Wave, Twitter, Facebook, etc. The potential for getting information out to a wide audience is better than it has ever been, and is likely to improve with every new technological development.
The skill level of the average birder is probably better now than it  
has ever been - not the "elite" birder, of course, but common garden  
variety birder now has access to better field guides, online image  
banks like ABID, online calls like those at Birds Australia and the  
ABC, and all the communication tools mentioned above. More people have  
better optics and high-end digital cameras, and this "average birder"  
probably takes multiple shots in the field to fine tune ID later.
So we should have a flawless, reliable rare bird alert system? No!  
That's where technology won't make that much difference. OK, there are  
possibly more birders than ever before, looking for birds in better- 
documented places. But apart from the increased number of birders in  
the field, that doesn't make it much more likely that an unusual bird  
will (a) be seen (b) correctly identified and (c) notified to birders  
all over the country - particularly in a country the size of  
Australia. Consider the numbers - 1,000 birders scouring the coastline  
of Australia doesn't really improve the hit rate over 200 or 300 doing  
the same thing. It might mean we hear about a handful of rarities  
where once only one or two were reported. That's where the rare bird  
alert breaks down - we still don't have enough birders with the  
requisite skills covering enough the suitable habitat enough of the  
time. The trickle of rarities coming through is nice, and will always  
be nice, but until technology gives us a way of DISCOVERING these  
rarities then it won't matter how good the alert system is: the chain  
breaks down at the thinnest end, people seeing and identifying a rarity.
We can expect things to improve little by little as more of these  
common garden variety birders adopt the communications tools  
available. 10 years ago, there were plenty of birders who didn't carry  
a mobile phone. Now there are very few. 10 years ago almost none had  
email access away from home - now many do. In ten years time I'd guess  
that almost every birder will be online no matter where they are. This  
will help the get the rare bird messages out quicker - whichever  
method they use - but I can't see it will make much difference in  
finding the rare and unusual bird in the first place. We might have to  
wait a further 10 years for THAT sort of technology!!


Russell Woodford
Birding-Aus List Owner

Geelong   Victoria   Australia
http://www.birding-aus.org

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