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Recording sites
For the BirdTrack project, we obviously need to know where you
go birdwatching. You can register as many sites as you wish, but
records from sites that you visit regularly are the most useful,
for example your local park or gravel pits. These sites are assigned
to you within the BirdTrack database. If a friend wishes to enter
records from the same site then they will need to register it under
their own user id.
| The information that we require is straightforward:
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All of the last three location recording methods are used to derive
a grid reference that we will use to map your data. We have provided
three different methods to make it as easy as possible for a wide
range of people to use the system. The new Google mapping system
(including satellite images) is now available for Britain, Ireland
and the Channel Isles at present. Postcodes are not used in the
Republic of Ireland. When registering a site, we will automatically
assign it to a county unless that square covers more than one county.
In such cases, the site confirmation page will prompt you to choose
the most appropriate county from a list of options. For help with
counties click here.
An alternative method of adding a site to your list is to select
it from one of the drop-down lists on the site registration page.
These lists include the main birdwatching sites in Ireland and major
RSPB reserves. To add one of these sites to your list just select
it from the drop-down menu and click go. You can also select from
a list of top county sites by simply selecting the county and then
selecting your site from the new drop-down list. For both methods,
the name, county and grid reference will be added to your personal
sites list automatically.
What is a site?
A site can be almost as big (up to a 10km square) or as small as
you like. For most BirdTrack recorders a site is going to be a regular
birdwatching area such as your garden, a local park or a nature
reserve. For these sites you will be able to provide us with a fairly
accurate location, such as postcode for a garden (eg IP24 2PU) or
a four-figure grid reference for a nature reserve (eg TL8781). If
your site overlaps two or more 1km squares, please give the grid
reference for the 1km square in which most of the site lies. If
you are birdwatching in an area where it is difficult to provide
an accurate location, such as Rannoch Moor or Thetford Forest, then
a 10km grid reference will be sufficient (eg TL88). After you have
registered a site, the site name will appear on a personalised site
list every time you use the data entry system. You can then select
the appropriate site. If you discover that you haven't registered
the site for which you want to enter data you will be able to register
it before you proceed.
You can also now upgrade or downgrade your sites for ease of use,
and this is ideal for entering casual records. Downgraded sites
won't appear in the drop-down list when you enter a species list,
nor will they appear on your main 'View my Sites' page. You can
also upgrade these sites at a later date if needed.
Most of the time we will map results by 10 km squares and present
other results at a regional level. For such analyses it is not vital
to provide a highly accurate location for every site although it
will be helpful if you are as precise as possible.
Providing accurate grid references will be really useful because
it will allow us to disseminate bird records to County Recorders
for use in bird reports (with the observer's permission). It would
also help if you use site names that are likely to be understood
by your local bird recorder.
Site recording and the Bird Atlas 2007-11
BirdTrack and Bird
Atlas 2007-11 are running side-by-side and records submitted
on one system will be available to the other (for more details on
links between the two, click
here). To make your BirdTrack records compatible with the Atlas,
we need to know a bit more about your registered sites. In particular
we need to know the squares your sites cover, and how these lie
within tetrads and 10-km squares. To see how we will define your
sites, click here.
Recording visits
For each birdwatching visit we will ask you for some simple information.
We will need to know where you went birdwatching, the date and the
times of your observations. Recording times are not essential but
they do give us a valuable measure of observer effort so we encourage
you to record them. You also have the opportunity to enter notes
about your visit. These might cover topics such as the weather conditions
or which parts of the site were covered.
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