Tens Of Thousands Of Volunteers To Join ÃÛèÖAPP’s Christmas Bird Count

Bird watchers fromÌýAlaska to BelizeÌýwill spend part of their holiday season far from shopping malls, looking for birds in the great outdoors. The longest running Citizen Science event in the world, ÃÛèÖAPP's annual Christmas Bird Count (CBC) will take place between December 14, 2008 and January 5, 2009. Information gatheredÌýhelps scientists learn more about how birds are faring throughout North America, adding to over a century of data collected by previous generations of volunteers.

With habitat and wild areas disappearing at an alarming rate, and global warming affecting some ranges, scientists will rely on CBC data to identify birds in most urgent need of conservation action.

"Everyone who takes part in the Christmas Birds Count plays a critical role in helping us focus attention and conservation where it is most needed." said . "Their observations are the foundation for ÃÛèÖAPP's State of the Birds Reports, like our analysis, which attracted worldwide attention and concern when it revealed precipitous declines among many of our nation's most common and familiar birds."

The holiday bird count is also instrumental in developing ÃÛèÖAPP's WatchList, which most recently identified species in the continental U.S. and 38 in Hawaii in dire need of conservation help. The counts also reveal good news, the return of the American bald eagle, for example.
"The Christmas Bird Count is all about the power of individual action – that's why our theme is 'I Count,'" says . "What we do truly counts when it comes to conservation. These birds are sending us a clear message that their fate is determined by human activity more than anything else. As we've seen with the bald eagle, when we help them through conservation, their chances improve. But when we damage their habitat, convert wetlands and forests, then they are more likely to become rare or extinct."
During last year's count, nearly 70 million birds were counted in all 50 states, every Canadian province, parts of Central and South America, Bermuda, the West Indies, and Pacific Islands.

The Christmas Bird Count began over a century ago when the founder of ÃÛèÖAPP magazine, Frank Chapman, changed the course of ornithological history. In 1900, Chapman led a small group on an alternative to the "side hunt," when teams competed to see who could shoot the most game. Instead, Chapman proposed they identify, count, and record all the birds they saw, founding what is now considered to be the world's most significant citizen-based conservation effort.

To join a Citizen Science team in the field, new birders must join an established group that includes at least one experienced birdwatcher. New participants should contact their local compilers to sign up well in advance of December 14. To learn more about how to participate in a Christmas Bird Count new you, visit

Site visitors can watch results build in their area and across the Americas, as well as learn how local bird populations have changed during the last 100 years. Media can found out where counts are taking place in your area, and what birds were seen in the past.Ìý

For free photos,Ìýbird sounds, and "I Count" buttons you can download, explore our .

See the Christmas Bird Count in Central Park Count Ìý
For TV producers: b-roll available