Calling all Bird Enthusiasts for the Christmas Bird Count 2019-2020

Steller's Jay
Steller’s Jay. Photo: Laura Dollar

This Thursday, December 12th is the final of the three-part Birding 101 series from 6 pm to 8 pm at the Methodist Church on Lewis St. in preparation for this year’s Christmas Bird Count on December 14th. The class is free to the public. Beginning birders as well as experienced folks are welcomed. This is your chance to sign up for a birding team and meet others who will be participating. To find out more, contact Audubon Rockies’ Keith Bruno at kbruno@audubon.org.

On December 14th, the Weminuche Audubon Society welcomes all local residents, visitors, and bird enthusiasts to join the longest running citizen science survey in the world, the Christmas Bird Count. Our Pagosa 15-mile diameter circle (the count circle) is divided into 8 zones. On Count day, each zone is systematically walked, driven, and cross-country skied by a team of birders who identify the birds they see within their zone and tally the species names and the number of birds within each species.

At the end of the day, the birders gather at the Methodist Church on Lewis Street from 4pm to 7pm for a chili supper and a lively exchange of reports about the highlights and disappointments for each team. Totals are then tallied for each species and each zone.

This year will see even more interest than usual in the number of species and the total number of birds seen because the number of birds counted last year (3,466 in 2018) showed a considerable drop from the previous year’s count (5,314 in 2017). Lots of things factor into changes to these numbers, including temperature, precipitation, the expansion of agriculture, logging, invasive species, hunting, and climate change. An on-line account of the recently published report from the National Audubon Society titled “Climate Change and Birds” states, “Of the 588 North American bird species Audubon studied, more than half are likely to be in trouble. Our models indicate that 314 species will lose more than 50 percent of their current climatic range by 2080.” An overview of the report as well as a link to the entire document can be found here.

The Christmas Bird Count is a long-standing program of the National Audubon Society, with over 100 years of community science involvement. Each year, thousands of volunteers across the Western Hemisphere come together to participate in this early-winter bird census. The CBC provides critical data on bird population trends.

Mountain Chickadee. Photo: Laura Dollar

Individuals may submit counts from their backyard feeders (you will need to make arrangements with the count organizer), log the species spotted during Count Week or join a team to traverse one of eight zones within Pagosa Springs’ count circle.

We hope you’ll join in on the fun, as you learn about birds and contribute to this critical effort to keep birds and the planet healthy.

San Juan River in winter
San Juan River, Pagosa Springs, Jan 2016. Photo: Laura Dollar