Showing posts with label red-faced cormorant. Show all posts
Showing posts with label red-faced cormorant. Show all posts

Monday, July 15, 2013

The Human Birdwatcher Project Presents: A Major Leak From the Global Birder Ranking System (Rise and Measure the Temple of the Five)




What does Final Five material know about Swainson's Thrush? Everything. Dry Tortugas National Park, FL.

BREAKING NEWS. Being the Number 7 birder in the United States, I am constantly besieged with questions about the Global Birder Ranking System (GBRS) that assigned me this lofty position in the first place. As I have mentioned before, GBRS is very secretive, and those of us considered to be Birding Giants are typically under various gag orders...we are able to acknowledge the existence of GBRS, but giving out details is not something we are typically free to do.

Until now. I recently received this memo (something I am normally not privy to) from an Anonymous Source about the current guidelines of potential inclusion into the vaunted Final Five; the top 5 birders in the country. Although I put my ranking and reputation at great risk by releasing this information to you all, hopefully it will put an end to the one of the questions I get the most...how do you get into the highest circle of the greatest birders in the United States?

Below is the complete memo, almost entirely intact, brought to you by none other than The Human Birdwatcher Project ("Birders are people too!"). Please do not ask me to explain the quote at the bottom...certain things are better left unsaid.

Subject: Memo: Standards and Practices for the Recertification and Inclusion of New Members of the Final Five
From: The Global Birder Ranking System (High Cabal)
To: The Global Birder Ranking System ( Class Bravo Birderer Technicians)

Hello GBRS staff, we hope this memo finds you well. With the discovery of mega-crippler Rufous-necked Wood-Rail (which earned Mr. Daw an outstanding 84 points!), many of you newer staff have been wondering how discoveries like this (or lack thereof) can affect the standings of The Final Five. The Final Five, of course, have all been there for several years now, with 4th and 5th place birders switching places several times as a result of certain eyebrow-raising gull misidentifications and a brief but bizarre public meltdown of Number 4 while chasing a Pink-footed Goose last winter. This outburst has since been attributed by the GBRS Ranking Audits Division (GBRS-RAD) to the observer's marathon of whisky consumption, brought on by a particularly nasty dip from the day before. GBRS-RAD recently determined this was an act of desperation, rather than deeply-ingrained personality flaws manifesting themselves (see March 2012 memo "Recurring Traits Found in GBRS Low-Ranked American Birders"). 

The GBRS High Cabal wants to reassure you junior staff that the regulations for eligibility of The Final Five have remained much as they have been since the January 2011 memo. As a refresher, here are the current requirements for inclusion in the Final Five.




Most birders could not tell you how to identify an immature Great Frigatebird, which is showing off its characteristic ruddy head and pink feet. The Final Five would know this bird instantly, with no need for field guides. Photographed at Midway Atoll.

1. Identification Skills. It goes without saying that the most important factor in ranking of the Final Five are a birder's identification skills. The Final Five must be leaders in the most challenging aspects of North American bird identification, particularly groups such as gulls, tubenoses, female hummingbirds, flycatchers, etc. Intimate knowledge of Mexican, Central American, Siberian, Caribbean and European species that have or could occur in the United States is expected as well.




The Final Five are constantly on the lookout for unexpected birds, no matter the chances against them. Gray-backed Tern (this one from Midway Atoll) may someday reward southern Californian birders who put in time sorting through summer tern flocks.

2. Birds Found. The quickest way a birder can increase their standing in GBRS is not to chase rare birds, but to find them. For example, points earned for documenting a Ross's Gull can (at least temporarily) completely offset a birder's consistent inability to differentiate Red-necked and Little Stint at 500 yards. Of course finding a national mega carries the most weight, but everything from state records to documenting localized breeding for the first time can cumulatively bear heavily on a Final Five contender's GBRS score.




A birder could have Grasshopper Sparrow for every county in their state, and that would not propel them into the Final Five. Medicine Lake National Wildlife Refuge, MT.

3. Lists. The classified formula of calculating a birder's lists and integrating them into their GBRS score remains the same. It is important to stress the fact that impressive list totals often are not found in conjunction with the other attributes listed in this document.




Anyone in the Final Five knows that despite it being an exotic waterfowl species, there has been no suspected case of escapee Tufted Ducks in California for years. Lake Merritt, Oakland, CA.

4. Vagrants and Escapees. The Final Five must have a firm grip on knowing the provenance of birds whose origins are questionable. Neither cage bird conspiracy theorists nor blatantly biased stringers will be eligible for upgrading to The Final Five. Those who have been on the right side of history in cases like this (which may or may not be in accordance to various state committee decisions) will be rewarded appropriately.




In terms of molt and plumage, the appearance of this Mississippi Kite would be challenging to describe for many birders. Not so, for the Final Five. Dairy Mart Ponds, Tijuana River Valley, CA.

5. Molt. Simply, complete memorization of the contents of the Pyle books is expected; additional knowledge and insight is preferred. It should go without saying that bird topography must be known like the back of one's hand. The benefits of molt mastery are many and need not be explained here.




Top-ranked birders have been gossiping about the potential split between Western and Eastern Willets for years. A thorough, respectable genetic study would probably seal the deal; Final Five candidates would know what types of studies would be acceptable in this particular case. "Western" Willet, Marina Park, Ventura, CA.


6. Genetics. The field of genetic studies of birds resulting in splitting and lumping species is fluid and constantly undergoing change. It is paramount that the Final Five know both the current and obsolete methods used in avian genetic studies, the history of these tools, and splits and lumps that may occur going forward.




All current Final Five birders are intimately familiar with the flight call of Blackburnian Warbler. Some inexperience with flight calls of rare and range-restricted species (i.e. Kirtland's Warbler, Colima Warbler) is acceptable for future Final Five candidates. Dry Tortugas National Park, FL.

7. Flight Calls. Vocalizations are a basic, crucial part of various identifications and need not be discussed here. However, flight calls of passerines are known to a small minority of birders and can provide conclusive identification of unseen flyover birds. Western birders in particular suffer from a lack of knowledge in this field, due to differences in species communities and the nature of migration in western states. Future nominees for the Final Five from western states are expected to overcome this regional handicap.




While the laybirder may suggest that the crest of Crested Auklet may simply be a function of breeding plumage, the Final Fiver will know that a study has shown that they serve an important function in feeling their way around the dimly-lit rock crevices where they nest. Buldir Island, AK.

8. Science. The Final Five need not hold degrees in a scientific field, although it is helpful. However, a solid understanding of science and it's framework of critical thinking is necessary. There is no room in The Final Five for theoretical ornithologists, who put forth theories on bird behavior, movements, appearance, and biology based on complete speculation and guesswork.




A member of the Final Five is expected to exude a wealth of knowledge pertaining to all North American birds. In a recent test by GBRS-RAD, GBRS birders ranked 1-5 all correctly answered that the set gillnet fishery for Kodiak Island, AK, had an estimated bycatch of 28 Red-faced Cormorants in 2002. Buldir Island, AK. 

9. Knowledge. Encyclopedic knowledge of birdlife is expected in The Final Five. This includes, but is not limited to, status and distribution of birds down to very fine temporal and spatial scales, repertoire of vocalizations, variations of specific plumages and morphology, behavior, conservation issues, and known connections to ecosystems. Knowledge is power, and one cannot become a power-birder without it.






This bucolic scene features birders displaying exemplary conduct. They demonstrate a youthful vigor, ostensible camaraderie, potential solidarity, a healthy interest in something other than birds, and excellent calves.

10. Conduct. A birder is a birder both in the field and after the binoculars come off.  The Final Five are expected to have social skills far and above those of the average birder, or to be explicitly clear, the social skills one would expect from the average nonbirder. Expected conduct does not compel the Final Five to be mild-mannered or inoffensive, but the following habits and traits are strongly desired: Not embarrassing themselves in online forums/Facebook groups/listservs; keeping an even temper; comprehension of basic social cues (i.e. the ability to detect and dispense sarcasm, making a joke that other people can understand, etc); lacking prejudices against large swaths of the population (i.e. men, women, Asians, beginning birders etc.); not pronouncing bird names in bizarre, completely unconventional ways; not being overly serious, petty, or passive-aggressive. A mild amount of awkwardness is acceptable for members of the Final Five, however the stifling awkwardness abundant in the birding community generally prevents birders from advancing beyond Birder #85 or so.

With the number of skilled but socially isolated, hermit-like birders in the United States whose conduct is poorly understood, GBRS is considering the creation of a supplemental list to track and rate hermit birders. A decision on the creation of this new ranking subset is expected in the coming months. 

Moving forward, we continue to cast a wary eye on the incursion of photographers into the birding community and the increasingly gray area between birders and photographers, which some worry may potentially complicate GBRS scoring. At this point in time we will stay the course and not score those who have not admitted to being a birder, in public or otherwise.

The annual GBRS 4th of July BBQ in Bridgeport, CA, was a great success! Congratulations to Birder #38, who won the chili cook-off.

The shorebirds are moving south friends, and as their numbers swell, so too will your GBRS score. Good birding everyone, and as always...

"Limiting diffusions to two dimensions increases the number of evolutionary jumps within the species. Rise and measure the Temple of the Five. Transformation is the goal. They will not harm their own."

Please destroy this document after reading. Thank you! - GBRS High Cabal

Friday, December 31, 2010

Another Banner Year


Red-legged Kittiwake. Buldir Island, AK.

Shit! That was fast. All of a sudden, its over. 2010....done. I give it a B. 2010 was better than average. It's still no 2006 (A+), otherwise known as The Year Of The Ashtray, but it  has been pretty solid. Definitively better than a couple years this decade though. Of course, I'm just talking about big picture stuff here, not birding.....which is what you ultimately are here for.

Right. Y2K10. I got to work in one of my favorite areas to bird (Southeast Arizona), somehow went all the way out to (and survived!) Buldir Island, and achieved Redemption with the Humboldt Brown Rain-Shrike. Like 2009 (when I went out to Midway), seabirds and the remote island experience shaped and defined the entire year, although both times I was only off the mainland for less than 4 months. I am still attempting to wrap my mind around my proclivity to do this to myself. In my mind I can do some serious placemaking in these harsh realms...we'll see if I return to an island scene in Y2K11.


One of the famous Rufous-capped Warblers that lived up-canyon from me this spring. Florida Canyon, AZ.


STRING OF PEARLS! A Slaty-backed Gull makes its way towards Northwest Point. Buldir Island, AK.

32 new birds this year! I have a distinct feeling of Victory deep in my spine, and wonder if I am actually glowing. Because I generally do a poor job at making lists (which is pretty much the most popular thing to do in blogs), I offer you this intimate piece of information....my new birds of the year.

Y2KLIFEBIRDS2010:

Blue-footed Booby (Mex - a Nemesis Bird, finally defeated)
Common Black-Hawk (Az)
Rufous-capped Warbler (Az)
Montezuma Quail (Az)
Northwestern Crow (Ak)
Trumpeter Swan (Ak)
White-winged Crossbill (Ak)
Arctic Loon (Ak)
Kittlitz's Murrelet (Ak)
Horned Puffin (Ak)
Parakeet Auklet (Ak)
Crested Auklet (Ak)
Least Auklet (Ak)
Whiskered Auklet (Ak)
Thick-billed Murre (Ak)
Red-legged Kittiwake (Ak)
Aleutian Tern (Ak)


This Red-faced Cormorant was a proud parent of triplets. Buldir Island, AK.



I'm not trying to do any horn-tooting or anything, but you should look at the full-sized image...meet the icy stare of the auklet. Least Auklet, @Buldir.

Red-faced Cormorant (Ak)
Rock Ptarmigan (Ak)
Easten Yellow Wagtail (Ak)
Gray-crowned Rosy-Finch (Ak....long overdue, don't I know it)
Common Redpoll (Ak)
Common Rosefinch (Ak)
Hawfinch (Ak)
Brambling (Ak)
Rustic Bunting (Ak)
Wood Sandpiper (Ak)
Common Sandpiper (Ak)
Red-necked Stint (Ak)
Long-toed Stint (Ak)
Mottled Petrel (Ak)
Brown Shrike (Ca)



Why hello Common Rosefinch, its good to see you too. @Buldir

Missed Birds:

Bean Goose (Ca)
Gyrfalcon (Ca)
Ivory Gull (Ca)
Black-tailed Godwit (Ak)
Snipe Sp. So, I saw 2 snipe while in the Aleutians. One that flushed from the nuclear warhead storage area on Adak Island sounded like a frakkin' Semipalmated Plover, and I have no clue what that was. Most likely, something awesome. The other was on Buldir and didn't call (probably a Common Snipe though). At any rate, Wilson's Snipes are not expected to occur in the Western Aleutians, so whatever they were were probably new to me. Bloody frustrating. In fact, its giving me a nose bleed. Right now. But I digress...


Wood Sandpipers were one of the few expected species at Bean Goose Pond for a couple weeks. I always thought these birds would look extremely similar to Solitary Sandpipers, but they seem easily distingushable. Note golden spangling on the back. @Buldir.




A migrant Common Black-Hawk cruises in the northbound lane of the Santa Cruz River. Tubac, AZ.

The yearlist is at 406, including introduced birds (401 without them). I'm completely satisfied with that, although I will certainly do my best to better that in 2011, El Año Tranquilo.

A few kickass albums that surfaced this year:

Bomb The Music Industry! - Adults!!! Smart!!! Shithammered!!! And Bored By Everything!!!!
The Slackers - The Great Rocksteady Swindle
The Menzingers - Chamberlain Waits
Leatherface - The Stormy Petrel
Forgetters - Forgetters
Defiance, Ohio - Midwestern Minutes

Obviously there were many more winners that came out this year, but these won my affections more than most.  The new Bad Religion and None More Black albums have some great songs too...the sad fact is that I missed out on a lot of albums that came out this summer due to my station on Buldir Island (i.e. Off With Their Heads, Gaslight Anthem, The Gamits) so I am still playing catchup. It's nice knowing there is some great music out there that I can readily get my hands on though.


Lastly, this is where I'll be for about 10 weeks this spring. Swainson's Hawks Bird Observatory in Chavarrillo, Mexico will be my home. I won't be travelling much (mostly standing in one spot looking up), but the birding around town is supposed to be quite facemelty. Really looking forward to that. It invokes a visceral reaction deep in my gut, sort of like my body is getting ready to be wracked by the sight of awesome tropical and subtropical birds. Can't wait! El Año Tranquilo should be a good one.

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Rock Well To Tell The Spell


Red-faced Cormorants rule the cliffs from their corma-eyries. Truly a gem amongst the non-waterproofed ones.

When dispensing indispensable pieces of wisdom and advice, as I'm prone to do, I frequently finish my advice with the flourish of, "I am a scientist, after all", to add that extra sense of professional credibility.

Which is true.  I am a (currently unemployed) scientist.  It's what I do.  In fact, I science really hard.  Yeah.  I just used it as a verb, and I'm not sorry about it.


Harlequin Ducks and Common Eiders lurk in nearshore waters throughout the Aleutian Islands.  

Most people can respect that.  But, as so many people at each end of the sociopolitical spectrum have pointed out, scientists are TERRIBLE at communicating their knowledge and discoveries to the general public.  Evangelical Christians will tell you this.  Heretic scientists will tell you this.  And, more importantly, I will tell you this.

Ostensibly, one might say that there are many reasons for this distant gap in dialogue.  You could claim that there is no real mechanism in place to give people up-to-date information about some of the big picture things.  You could claim that scientists don't put enough effort into making their research not only available to the public, but easily comprehensible.  You could claim the Right-Wing media purposefully vilifies science, or at the very least filters it to their liking.  And you would be right on all accounts.


Love the kittiwakes.

But there is one true reason at the root of this thing, which is.......scientists are nerds.  

Which should not be news to anyone.  Imagine, for a moment, that we scientists did not get into our respective fields partially (or in some cases, entirely) as a result of our pathetically underdeveloped social skills.  That we could get along with people just as well as animals, microbes, photons, or what have you.  Imagine that we were actually known to be The Great Communicators of our time.....I think the ideological and political landscape would be a bit different (feel free to interpret that to mean "better"). 

Are there exceptions to the rule?  Of course.  But who cares???  The main thrust of this thing is that the next time you meet some self-sequestered, xenophobic, coffee-avoiding, granola-snorting, croc-wearing obnoxious quasihippiebiologist who is incapable of carrying on a conversation with someone outside his/her field......well.......you can do what you think is best.


Aleutian Cackling Geese are one of the few species that have made a strong recovery thanks to the Endangered Species Act.  Common on Buldir, they are also very annoying.