|
The relationship between BirdTrack
and Bird Atlas 2007-11
BirdTrack is a long-term bird listing and recording project organized
by the BTO, RSPB and BirdWatch Ireland. It focuses on tracking patterns
of migration and movements throughout the year at the scale of Britain
and Ireland, using the proportion of lists containing a given species
as a measure of species occurrence that controls for recording effort.
Migration patterns are presented as maps and tables that are updated
automatically each night. In the medium-term we also expect that
BirdTrack will contribute useful data for long-term monitoring for
scarce species that remain reasonably widespread but are too rare
to be well covered by sampling schemes such as the BTO/JNCC/RSPB
Breeding Bird Survey. In addition to lists, observers can also submit
any other records to BirdTrack. These supplementary data provide
valuable additional information for things such as early and late
dates, maps and site lists. BirdTrack also provides a comprehensive
facility that observers can use to store and analyse their own bird
records, with automatic forwarding of records to County Bird Recorders
(with the observer’s permission).
Atlases have provided a definitive record of the status of all
bird populations in Britain and Ireland at approximately 20-year
intervals since 1970. The 2007-11 Atlas, organised by BTO, BirdWatch
Ireland and the Scottish Ornithologists’ Club, aims to provide
complete coverage of Britain and Ireland to map distributions of
all bird species. In this respect it complements BirdTrack which
can only cover a sample of sites. The 2007-11 Atlas will produce
distribution and relative abundance maps for both the breeding season
and winter periods. To fulfil these aims there are two complementary
fieldwork elements: Roving Recorders and Timed Tetrad Visits. The
former aim to amass lists of all species breeding or wintering in
each 10-km square throughout Britain and Ireland. The latter involve
timed counts from a sample of tetrads (2km x 2km squares) to provide
information on relative abundance at the 10-km square level.
Both the Atlas and BirdTrack projects provide data that are important
for the future conservation of our bird populations and the environment
more generally. We already know that both bird distributions and
movement patterns are changing in response to climate change and
changes in land use. Whilst they differ in their objectives, survey
work undertaken for one can make a valuable contribution to the
other. Information submitted to BirdTrack will be used in the Atlas
and Roving Records submitted to the Atlas will be available to BirdTrack.
You need only enter your data to one project or the other.
We hope that active birdwatchers will be able to support one or
both of these projects. The web sites have been designed to make
it as easy as possible for you to do so, and for you to move seamlessly
between the two sites if you wish. If you already contribute regularly
to BirdTrack, please continue entering your records into BirdTrack
as usual. If you are an Atlas Roving Recorder who is compiling comprehensive
lists of species, either for individual tetrads or 10-km squares,
you are encouraged to submit these as ‘Complete Lists’
in BirdTrack. To participate in Timed Tetrad Visits for the Atlas,
you will need to register with your Atlas Regional Organiser (see
the Atlas site for details). Timed tetrad counts from registered
observers should be submitted via the Atlas website.
.
|