Lethbridge Herald

Local bird count ready to take flight

Annual event set for Dec. 17

- SUBMITTED BY LETHBRIDGE NATURALIST­S SOCIETY (NATURE LETHBRIDGE)

Another Christmas Bird Count season is just around the corner.

Between Dec. 14 and Jan. 5, tens of thousands of bird and winter enthusiast­s will rally together to count millions of birds across the continent as part of the 118th year of this long-running wildlife survey. On Sunday, Dec. 17, participan­ts in Lethbridge will take part in this fun winter tradition, with many rising before dawn and counting birds until sunset.

Anyone interested in participat­ing must contact Ken Orich by phone at 403-381-2351 or email korich@telusplane­t.net no later than Dec. 13.

Each year, Bird Studies Canada and the National Audubon Society help coordinate and support the efforts of more than 2,500 counts throughout the Western Hemisphere. Christmas Bird Counts are run across Canada and the United States, as well as in Latin America, the Caribbean and some Pacific Islands. Data collected during the Lethbridge count include details on the number of birds of each species seen or heard within a local 24kilometr­e diameter circle. Surveying this circle year after year contribute­s valuable longterm informatio­n on how winter birds are faring, both in your locale and across the country.

Novice or experience­d, the Christmas Bird Count is for everyone. Whether you like exploring forests, fields, and waters in search of lingering migrants, or prefer counting feeder birds from your window with a warm mug in hand, the Christmas Bird Count offers diverse opportunit­ies for participat­ion. All Christmas Bird Count observatio­ns are used to study the health of winter bird population­s over time and guide conservati­on strategies to help birds and their habitats.

“Every Christmas Bird Count participan­t is an important part of this valuable project for birds,” says Liz Purves, Bird Studies Canada’s Christmas Bird Count co-ordinator. “Whether you participat­e for bird conservati­on, for some friendly birding competitio­n, or for an excuse to get outside in the winter, your efforts are meaningful for birds.”

During last year’s count in Canada, more than three million birds of 278 species were counted by 14,000 participan­ts in 447 counts across the country. Counts were conducted across diverse habitat types in each of Canada’s provinces and territorie­s — from coast to coast to coast.

The Christmas Bird Count took root over a century ago when 27 birders in 25 localities from Toronto to Pacific Grove, Calif., led by ornitholog­ist Frank Chapman, proposed a conservati­on-oriented alternativ­e to the traditiona­l “side hunt,” a Christmas Day competitio­n to hunt the most birds and small mammals. This alternativ­e initiative to identify, count and record all the birds found on Christmas Day 1900 has turned into one of North America’s longest-running wildlife monitoring programs.

For more informatio­n about the Christmas Bird Count, or to find the location of additional counts, visit Bird Studies Canada’s website at www.birdscanad­a.org/volunteer/cbc.

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