Now that you can input bird observation data from anywhere in the world into eBird there is some really cool information available, like world-wide range maps for any species in the world. Of course, once more data is entered outside of North America the maps will be much more valuable. Try it out; it’s fun!
Recent Posts
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The Ten Best Birds of ZambiaBy a Guest
Birding Highlights of Northern BotswanaBy Luca
Hong Kong Trip Report: February 2014By Mike
Invaders from the ContinentBy David T
Species Spotlight: Spotted OwletBy Kai Pflug
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| DAY | WRITER(S) | SERIES |
|---|---|---|
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| TUE | Donna (m) Susan (m) Hannah (m) Fitzroy (m) Grace (m) | Bird Guides (w) |
| WED | Leslie (bw) Faraaz (bw) | Ask a Birder (w) |
| THU | Paul (w) Cathy (bw) | Birder’s Lists (w) |
| FRI | David (w) | Species Spotlight (w) |
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| w weekly, bw biweekly, m monthly | ||
| Any time: Jason, Mark, John, Sara, Rolf, Dragan | ||
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The Parasitic Jaegar map is pretty funny – it repeats Europe, Asia and Africa three times across the screen.
It is very cool. I need to keep better notes; I’ve been adding all my sightings over the years but I seldom collected detailed enough notes to ad here.