BBC Wildlife Magazine

Working for nature

Verifying bird records, Georgetown, Guyana

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Leon Moore is reviewing bird records

All over the world, devoted individual­s are doing their bit by volunteeri­ng to get involved with wildlife. Megan Shersby meets a man who checks citizen science bird reports.

When Leon Moore first started using eBird in 2013, he was the only active Guyanese on the app. He has since trained others and become a verifier for the country’s bird records. “I was introduced to eBird by a wildlife tour leader while I was working at a lodge in central Guyana,” he says. “I already knew a lot about birds, so he suggested I submit my records and become a reviewer.”

Leon works alongside Dr Brian O’Shea, a US ornitholog­ist studying birds in Guyana and Suriname, to verify between 30 to 50 lists from birdwatche­rs per month. “Guyana’s total bird species list is roughly 850, of which 754 are on eBird,” says Leon. “Every year we see between 550 and 620 species recorded by observers.”

The work of a verifier is more complicate­d than it may seem: “I help to develop and manage checklist filters for all of Guyana’s regions. These generate a list of birds for a particular time and location.”

Records can get flagged for a number of reasons: if a species is particular­ly rare, not on the checklist for an area, or if the number of individual­s of a species is unusual: “Five orange-breasted falcons reported in one place would need to be investigat­ed.”

Once a record has been flagged, Leon or Brian get in contact with the observer to ask about markings they can remember, and whether a photograph or audio recording was taken.

“Currently, 57 per cent of all records that are flagged by the filters are then validated,” says Leon. “We also determine whether the participan­t is eBirding correctly – are they sharing the right informatio­n on when, where and how they went birding?”

He explains that it is important for reports to be verified, as eBird is both a scientific database, which can be used to inform and develop conservati­on initiative­s, and a reliable resource for the global birding community.

As a tour guide, Leon has contribute­d plenty of his own sightings: “One of my favourites was the rufous-winged ground cuckoo, as it is such an elusive species,” he reveals. “I have submitted records of 623 different species in Guyana, and roughly 400 more from elsewhere.”

By volunteeri­ng, Leon hopes he can make a difference to the protection of birds and other species in Guyana: “I’m extremely concerned about wildlife declines due to hunting and habitat loss.”

FIND OUT MORE eBird: ebird.org Megan Shersby visited Guyana courtesy of Guyana Tourism Authority. Look our for her feature in an upcoming issue.

Guyana’s total bird species list is roughly 850, of which 754 are on eBird.

 ??  ?? Tour guide and keen birder Leon Moore uses his knowledge to verify wildlife records.
Tour guide and keen birder Leon Moore uses his knowledge to verify wildlife records.

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