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14 January 2022

Changes in eBird frequency since 2016

 

The eBird bar charts give us "frequency: the percentage of checklists reporting that species within a specified date range" - so it gives you an idea of how likely are you to encounter that species during that time frame in appropriate habitat.

These data don't really tell us about the actual abundance of the species - the size of their populations (because of the variety of counting methods and observer effort used to get these eBird data, and other things) ... but ... intuitively, if there are changes in frequency for really common birds - that must say something.

So, I have compared a species' frequency from December 2021 to the frequency from 2016 - in a very imprecise way that would not stand up to statistical analysis.  I have summed the year's frequency for 2016 and for 2021 and compared them by subtracting the 2016 number from the 2021 number.  Here are the results for the top and bottom 30 species - the 30 species that show the greatest increase or decrease in frequency since 2016.

 eBird Regional District of East Kootenay Frequency Difference

Showing 60 of the greatest frequency differences between the sum of eBird frequency for 2016 compared to the sum of eBird frequency for 2021 for 60 species in the Regional District of East Kootenay

English Name
BC_Game
Abundance
Diff_2021
American Crow       vc   3.912559532
Common Raven   g   vc   3.267595681
Canada Goose   g   vc   2.520634189
Northern Flicker       vc   2.459357979
Bald Eagle       c   2.431250047
Mallard   g   vc   2.289990853
Red-breasted Nuthatch       vc   2.125886915
Dark-eyed Junco       vc   1.596265554
American Robin       vc   1.506643623
Rock Pigeon   g   vc   1.454782405
Blue Jay       sc   1.313311740
Eurasian Collared-Dove   g   sc   1.255200966
Black-billed Magpie       c   1.118253242
Bufflehead   g   c   1.115452534
American Wigeon   g   c   1.098214353
American Coot   g   c   1.089445026
Turkey Vulture       sc   0.987196201
Pine Siskin       vc   0.920770842
European Starling       vc   0.916598597
Townsend's Solitaire       c   0.910150795
Red-tailed Hawk       c   0.876833943
Ring-necked Duck   g   c   0.863093321
Trumpeter Swan       sr   0.862401577
Tree Swallow       vc   0.835159263
Osprey       c   0.786232455
Green-winged Teal   g   c   0.763347806
Vesper Sparrow       c   0.760730881
Western Bluebird       c   0.744897794
Eastern Kingbird       c   0.731731785
Killdeer       c   0.730740303
             
English Name   BC_Game   Abundance   Diff_2021
Ruffed Grouse   g   c   -0.068174952
Barrow's Goldeneye       sc   -0.074931879
Calliope Hummingbird       sc   -0.088113133
White-crowned Sparrow       sc   -0.088878485
Black-headed Grosbeak       sr   -0.098174169
Brown-headed Cowbird       c   -0.098403200
Common Grackle       sc   -0.100154859
Northern Shrike       sc   -0.116332190
Black Tern       unc   -0.122280235
White-throated Sparrow       sr   -0.140874202
Northern Waterthrush       c   -0.155879991
MacGillivray's Warbler       c   -0.172119636
House Finch       vc   -0.181452069
Clark's Nutcracker       vc   -0.199776593
Warbling Vireo       c   -0.228123752
Great Blue Heron       sc   -0.229904927
Townsend's Warbler       c   -0.245286146
Hairy Woodpecker       vc   -0.249200275
Song Sparrow       vc   -0.265412316
American Dipper       c   -0.286035808
Vaux's Swift       c   -0.316657000
Rufous Hummingbird       c   -0.454750968
Bohemian Waxwing       c   -0.540717624
Common Redpoll       c   -0.571101261
Pine Grosbeak       c   -0.779422544
Black-capped Chickadee       vc   -0.803501285
Evening Grosbeak       c   -0.962873544
White-breasted Nuthatch       sc   -1.054325951
Downy Woodpecker       vc   -1.114156219
Steller's Jay       c   -1.154665009

 

So, now you are more likely to see American Crow, Common Raven, Canada Goose, Northern Flicker, and Bald Eagle, etc. when you go out birding; and less likely to see Steller's Jay, Downy Woodpecker, White-breasted Nuthatch, Evening Grosbeak, Black-capped Chickadee, etc. than you would have five years ago.

I think decreases in the very common (vc) species indicates there are some population problems with them: they used to be commonly seen but are seen less often now, probably because there are fewer of them around, not because of some change in their behaviour or birders' behaviour.  And fewer of them around either because their populations are smaller or because there is less habitat available for them.

This is troublesome to think about for Downy Woodpecker and Black-capped Chickadee, especially.  Why?  They are easily identifyable and still fairly common but why would they be reported less unless there are just fewer of them to report?  And Hairy Woodpecker and Song Sparrow?  What's up with them?  And Rufous Hummingbird - hmm.

Clark's Nutcrackers and Great Blue Heron we know are having trouble. Nutcrackers with food supply in higher elevations: less productive limber pine seed crop, limber seeds having higher energy rewards than lodgepole pine.  And Herons having trouble with finding suitable nesting sites - and maybe more predation from a higher Bald Eagle population?

It's good to see Northern Flicker increase in frequency - they carve out lots of cavities for other birds to use as nests and help recycle dead trees.  Eurasian Collared-Dove we know has just "recently" arrived in the area and their population is currently growing rapidly.  They used to be rare but it didn't take long for them to become quite noticeable in human-settled areas.

The increasing frequency of seeing Bald Eagles:  if their numbers are indeed growing, that is fine - we need "top of the food chain" species as part of the overall balance.  Why would they be increasing?  Maybe warmer springs lets them get going earlier laying eggs and that translates to better survival of young?  Maybe they are taking advantage of having more Mallards around to eat?

So, yeah, the 2021 frequency data is cumulative and includes the same data as in the 2016 number.  Both frequency numbers contain all the data in eBird up until that point in time.  That adds some evening.  This is not comparing 2016 and earlier to the time frame of 2017 - 2021.

You can see the eBird bar chart here: https://ebird.org/barchart?byr=1900&eyr=2020&bmo=1&emo=12&r=CA-BC-EK

 And you can change the dates to see the differences for yourself, and you can download the numbers - scroll to bottom, "Download Histogram Data".

Yes, there are more eBirders now, but this is frequency data - so that is factored in.  What is not factored in is skill of the eBirder at detection and many other things - that's why this discussion is not very rigorous scientifically but it does give one something to think about.