Liron Gertsman (age 12!) of Vancouver was submitter of 100 millionth eBird record
Jan 05, 2015
- Bird photos by Liron Gertsman; photo of Liron by Andre Chan
Just before 6:00pm Pacific time on 8 August 2012, Liron Gertsman of Vancouver, British Columbia, submitted the 100 millionth observation to eBird. It was of an American Robin; one of 24 species that Liron saw at the Maplewood Conservation Area that day. The director of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, John Fitzpatrick said, “This is a true milestone in the history of field ornithology and citizen science. The power of so much data is only just beginning to be recognized around the world. I look forward to the time when even 100,000,000 observations seems like a quaint number! With eBird taking off so spectacularly now, that day is not so far off, and we are starting to discover some amazing new patterns about the natural world thanks to all these thousands of volunteer observers.”
As we approached 100 million records, we offered two contests: one awarding the person who submitted the 100,000,000th observation, and another for a checklist drawn at random. We would like to congratulate Liron Gertsman of Vancouver, British Columbia, who submitted our 100 millionth observation, and Chuck Heikkinen of Madison, Wisconsin, who submitted the checklist that we drew at random.
When we wrote to Liron, he responded via email: “Wow! I am really surprised by this news! I read the post on eBird in July and I can’t believe that my observation was the 100th million. Thanks so much! P.S. I know it will appear a bit surprising that I’m 12 years old”. He’s correct – we never would have guessed that he is a pre-teen given the very high quality of his eBird data. His eBird lists always report all species and he often includes notes on individual birds as well as information on breeding behavior. Liron is a model eBirder who just as well could have been featured as our eBirder of the month. Here is Liron’s complete checklist containing the American Robin to mark eBird’s 100,000,000th record.
Liron also shared his thoughts about eBird: “eBird is a website where birders can report their bird sightings after each time they go birding. Because eBird is an international website, when people submit observations, the migration of bird species is tracked, therefore teaching us more about certain bird species and their migration. eBird also allows people to see the decline and increase in bird populations across the world on amazing charts and graphs, or surprising news about bird species around the world. Every time I come back from birding outings, I go online to eBird, and submit what I saw that day. Then I might look at what other people have recently seen nearby. I really find it incredible that one site can have users from around the world sharing what they see and looking at what other people see. I often rely on eBird to set my destinations for bird watching and that’s a big impact that eBird has on my birding life. Thanks to all people who help run eBird.”
Liron also has a nature photography blog:
http://lironsnaturephotography.yolasite.com/
Some eBird statistics (as of 13 August 2012)
Total Observations: 100,333,837
Total Number of eBird Checklists: 7,187,076
Total Number of Species: 9,479
Total Number of Observers: 93,040
Total Number of Locations sampled: 1,005,056
Total Hours of effort-based eBirding: 7,537,608 (860 years)
Remaining countries with no eBird data: Bouvet Island, Equatorial Guinea, Tokelau, Wallis and Futuna, Heard Island and McDonald Islands.
When eBird began some ten years ago, we hoped we would be able to gather data in a way that they would be useful for science and conservation. And thanks to the efforts of thousands of observers like Liron and Chuck, we have now gathered over 100 million records, all of which are available for researchers and conservationists around the world. We have seen but a glimpse of what eBird will be able to do: from the State of the Birds report, to new STEM modeling that allow us view bird migration at a continental scale, to the work by groups like the Red de Observadores de Chile who have formed partnerships with the government to require eBird data be used in species assessments. We are now witnessing how birders, scientists, and conservationists all achieve better results when we work together. It took us ten years to gather 100 million records. We can’t wait for the next 100 million, and the results that will come from them.