Birding by numbers
Bonus bird: Black-throated Gray Warbler (photo by Jackie Bowman) |
Birders are known for keeping lists, of course, and most of us maintain at least a few. Listing helps us remember what we see, where we saw it, and when. It’s a way to chart our personal progress in the hobby. List building can also motivate us to spend more time birding, as if we need it.
This winter I’ve been playing a little listing game myself—to
see how many kinds of backyard birds I can spot before the first day of spring.
I’m up to 17 with a goal of 25. I’ll need some luck to get there but the unusually
warm winter is a plus. Spring migration is ahead of schedule.
If you happen to be a member of the Illinois Ornithological
Society (IOS) then you probably know about Listers Corner. It’s a database on
the IOS website where birders annually submit their personal sightings (for
Illinois only) in all manner of categories such as life list, big year, big
month, big day, county list, backyard list, green list and more.
Listers Corner is fun to peruse—google it and see. The volume
of arcane data is astounding. Want to know who has spotted the most species
in Ogle County? That would be Dan Williams, with 276. For DuPage, it’s Pete
Moxon with 315. In Vermilion County, Steve Bailey leads with 281.
But maybe you wish to know who has seen a Yellow-bellied
Sapsucker in the most counties? Andy Sigler holds that mark with 102, which
means he’s seen the bird at least once in every Illinois county. Some birders really
get around.
It’s all a bit silly, of course. County, state, and national
borders are human inventions. Birds don’t know or care how we draw things up. On
the other hand, a few species sound like they are laughing. I’m looking at you,
Mr. W. B. Nuthatch. Maybe they find our listing games amusing.
All birders can play. IOS welcomes submissions to Listers Corner, even by non-members. The archive goes back to 1987.
Finally countable: European Goldfinch (photo by Christian Goers) |
My name appears in only one category, Yard Life List-Suburban, where my total is 124 species—a respectable number after 27 years in the same home but still way down the list. The top yard birder, remarkably, claims 207 species after just five years of residency. I’m fortunate to add one or two species per year.
For all listing categories, the honor system applies. I
don’t know any birders who would pad a list with made-up sightings. Owen
Wilson, the actor, has a good line about that in “The Big Year,” not suitable
for a family newspaper.
The most-watched section of Listers Corner is Illinois Life List. Two birders are tied at 417 species each, and only 10 birders have seen at least 400 species in the state. The “400 Club” is rare air.
Four hundred fifty-nine species have been officially
recorded in Illinois. Two were added in 2023: Crested Caracara and Broad-tailed
Hummingbird. When those two lit up the Rare Bird Alert there was a mad rush to
see them, with the 400 clubbers and birders approaching the magic milestone
leading the way.
Joe Lill, who heads up the three-person Listers Corner
Committee for IOS, sits at 393 species for Illinois. He told me he missed the
caracara in Fulton Co. by a day, and the hummingbird in Champaign by an hour. His
failed efforts speak to the importance of reacting to rare bird sightings on a
moment’s notice and always keeping the gas tank full. Good timing helps, too.
Lill did experience some listing joy in 2023, elevating his
state life list by three with Ross’s Gull, Gray-crowned Rosy Finch, and Rock
Wren.
State listers received a welcome bonus in January when
the Illinois Ornithological Records Committee voted to add European Goldfinch
to the Illinois checklist. The species is seen regularly, especially in Lake
County, but until now was regarded as “introduced” and therefore not officially
countable.
Yet another bonus this winter was the
appearance of a Black-throated Gray Warbler in Elgin. The rare visitor from the
West visited a private feeder during the severe cold snap in mid-January. An accommodating
homeowner welcomed birders, enabling many to score an unexpected addition to
their life, Illinois or Cook County lists—in some cases all three.
So, to list or not to list? You
decide. It’s a matter of preference, personal style, and maybe your feelings about the competitive side of birding. That said, few birders are outwardly competitive, and many keep their listing achievements private.
For all of us, it’s about appreciating birds. Enjoy them however you wish. I’m thankful that birding offers so many ways to go about it.