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Index
Boreal
Birds
Canadian Lakes
Loon Survey
Christmas
Bird Count
Canadian
Migration
Monitoring
Network
Important Bird
Areas Program
Search the IBA Catalog
Nocturnal
Owl Monitoring
Programs
Project
FeederWatch
Project
NestWatch
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Studies Canada
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Bird Studies Canada conducts research nationally through volunteer-based surveys such
as the Canadian Lakes Loon Survey and Project FeederWatch. In addition, it coordinates the
analysis of data collected by a growing network of observatories monitoring migratory
birds across Canada
This
multi-year project tests the hypothesis that bird communities in
landscapes managed for timber output are similar to those in landscapes
subject only to natural disturbances.
- Canadian Lakes
Loon Survey:
This volunteer-based program monitors the effects of acid rain
and other human disturbance on loon breeding and presence on Canada's cottage lakes and
other waterbodies.
- Canadian Migration
Monitoring Network:
This network of migration monitoring stations from the Bay of
Fundy to Vancouver Island, supported by BSC, ensures that migratory bird populations are
adequately monitored from coast to coast.
- Christmas Bird Count
The Christmas Bird Count is done in over 1800 localities across Canada, the United
States and Latin America. Each local group of birders picks a day between
December 14 and January 5th inclusive, sets out a 24-km
diameter circle, then does their best to count all the birds within that
circle on the selected day.
- Nocturnal
Owl Monitoring Programs
Participants spend evenings afield in early spring, conducting roadside
surveys for calling owls in suitable habitat.
- Project
FeederWatch:
Participants keep track of the birds at their feeders during
designated periods throughout the winter; the collected data become part of a continental
survey.
- Project
NestWatch:
Participants look for nests,
notably those of common species like American Robins, and then follow
the nest's activity through the season. For each visit, observers note
down the date, time and nest contents (number of eggs and/or young). All
of these observations are then submitted on this web site where they are
automatically included in the national data base.
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