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FEEDERWATCH
FeederWatch - Count Feeder Birds for Science. Embrace the Winter. Count Feeder Birds for Science! Join, Renew or Donate. Put Up a Feeder. Count Birds. Enter Your Data. WELCOME TO FEEDERWATCH Thank you for supporting Project FeederWatch. You are signed up for next season, which runs from November 13, 2021, through April 30, 2022. In the fall we will ship instructional materials to first-time participants and calendars to renewing participants, unless you opted out of receiving print materials. Materials should arrive by November1, in time
JOIN, RENEW, OR DONATE Observe the birds outside your windows and contribute to science by joining Project FeederWatch. Join now for the 2021–22 FeederWatch season, which begins November 13. Please join the project for the country in which you reside. In the fall we will ship instructional materials to first-time participants, including our double-sided poster illustrating birds commonly seen USE THE FEEDERWATCH APP OR A TALLY SHEET Common Feeder Birds Interactive. Explore the winter distribution, food, and feeder preferences of common feeder birds.FEEDERWATCH APP
Download the app The FeederWatch app is available for both Apple and Android mobile devices. The app is free to registered FeederWatch participants. If you haven’t signed up for FeederWatch, join now. What you will find in the app You can use the FeederWatch app toSUBMIT YOUR COUNTS
Submit your counts. To help us learn more about feeder birds, we need your data–even if you made just one count! If you signed up for Project FeederWatch through our online store, or if you signed up by mail or phone and received your instructional kit in the mail with your ID number, you are ready to plot your count site on our map and start entering counts! HOUSE FINCH EYE DISEASE WHITE-TAILED STARLING August 2, 2020 at 1:03 pm. First time ever white tailed starling in Northeast Michigan! It looks like a weird evolutionary blip – a regular starling in ever other way, with long, solid white tail feathers sticking out prominently! Reply. Joanne says: August 22, 2020at 6:48 am.
WHITE HEADED ROBIN
Description. This is the second time we have seen the white headed Robin. The first time was Jan 7, 2014. The first photo is a cropped from an image my husband took Feb 3, 2014 at 11:53 am. The second photo is a cropped image I took Feb 3, 2014 at 8:35 am, showing this white headed robin in a group of robins and bluebirds. EYE DISEASE IN AMERICAN GOLDFINCHES Eye disease in American Goldfinches. December 8, 2016. FeederWatch collected data on eye disease in American Goldfinches for many years and then stopped because the prevalence of disease in goldfinches was minimal. Last season a number of FeederWatchers wrote to tell us they were seeing an increase in eye disease in American Goldfinches.FEEDERWATCH
FeederWatch - Count Feeder Birds for Science. Embrace the Winter. Count Feeder Birds for Science! Join, Renew or Donate. Put Up a Feeder. Count Birds. Enter Your Data. WELCOME TO FEEDERWATCH Thank you for supporting Project FeederWatch. You are signed up for next season, which runs from November 13, 2021, through April 30, 2022. In the fall we will ship instructional materials to first-time participants and calendars to renewing participants, unless you opted out of receiving print materials. Materials should arrive by November1, in time
JOIN, RENEW, OR DONATE Observe the birds outside your windows and contribute to science by joining Project FeederWatch. Join now for the 2021–22 FeederWatch season, which begins November 13. Please join the project for the country in which you reside. In the fall we will ship instructional materials to first-time participants, including our double-sided poster illustrating birds commonly seen USE THE FEEDERWATCH APP OR A TALLY SHEET Common Feeder Birds Interactive. Explore the winter distribution, food, and feeder preferences of common feeder birds.FEEDERWATCH APP
Download the app The FeederWatch app is available for both Apple and Android mobile devices. The app is free to registered FeederWatch participants. If you haven’t signed up for FeederWatch, join now. What you will find in the app You can use the FeederWatch app toSUBMIT YOUR COUNTS
Submit your counts. To help us learn more about feeder birds, we need your data–even if you made just one count! If you signed up for Project FeederWatch through our online store, or if you signed up by mail or phone and received your instructional kit in the mail with your ID number, you are ready to plot your count site on our map and start entering counts! HOUSE FINCH EYE DISEASE WHITE-TAILED STARLING August 2, 2020 at 1:03 pm. First time ever white tailed starling in Northeast Michigan! It looks like a weird evolutionary blip – a regular starling in ever other way, with long, solid white tail feathers sticking out prominently! Reply. Joanne says: August 22, 2020at 6:48 am.
WHITE HEADED ROBIN
Description. This is the second time we have seen the white headed Robin. The first time was Jan 7, 2014. The first photo is a cropped from an image my husband took Feb 3, 2014 at 11:53 am. The second photo is a cropped image I took Feb 3, 2014 at 8:35 am, showing this white headed robin in a group of robins and bluebirds. EYE DISEASE IN AMERICAN GOLDFINCHES Eye disease in American Goldfinches. December 8, 2016. FeederWatch collected data on eye disease in American Goldfinches for many years and then stopped because the prevalence of disease in goldfinches was minimal. Last season a number of FeederWatchers wrote to tell us they were seeing an increase in eye disease in American Goldfinches.FEEDERWATCH APP
Download the app The FeederWatch app is available for both Apple and Android mobile devices. The app is free to registered FeederWatch participants. If you haven’t signed up for FeederWatch, join now. What you will find in the app You can use the FeederWatch app to RARE BIRDS - FEEDERWATCH Rare Bird Reports If you see a rare bird during one of your FeederWatch counts, attach a photo with your report, and it will automatically be displayed here once the report is confirmed. If you see a rare bird on a non-count day and you would like to share a photoof the bird, please
SUBMIT YOUR COUNTS
Submit your counts. To help us learn more about feeder birds, we need your data–even if you made just one count! If you signed up for Project FeederWatch through our online store, or if you signed up by mail or phone and received your instructional kit in the mail with your ID number, you are ready to plot your count site on our map and start entering counts!COMMON FEEDER BIRDS
We’ve put together a list of almost 100 common feeder birds and cross referenced what they like to eat and where they like to eat it. Explore your region to see what you AMERICAN TREE SPARROW AND CHIPPING SPARROW American Tree Sparrow. Chipping Sparrow. Overall. This sparrow (6.25″ long, 16 cm) looks similar in summer and winter. It has a rusty cap and a rusty eye line, a bicolored bill, and a breast spot that is sometimes hidden. In summer this slightly smaller sparrow (5.5″ long, 14 cm) has a chestnut cap, a distinct white eyebrow andblack
UNUSUAL BIRDS
Among the most difficult birds to identify are the birds that have abnormal plumage or other characteristics, whether it be color variation, a bill deformity, or missing head feathers. These variations aren’t in any field guides, and sometimes the abnormality removes key field marks. If you see a strange-looking bird, use size,shape, and behavior
MOURNING DOVE WITH WHITE TAIL John Repasy says: April 18, 2021 at 2:15 pm. Just watching a morning dove with a white tail, but the top of its head is light grey blue. I have noticed a dove with a white tail off and on all winter, but this is the first that I’ve noticed to top of its head being a different colour. I live in Woodstock Ontario Canada. GRACKLE WITH WHITE FEATHERS Description. This is a photo of a grackle with white facial feathers. There were at least three such grackles at our feeders at various times – all three have slightly different white feathers, so I was able to tell there was more than one. One has just a spot of them above its beak, another has white feathers just around its eyes and athird
LOGIN SCREEN
Common Feeder Birds Interactive. Explore the winter distribution, food, and feeder preferences of common feeder birds. EYE DISEASE IN AMERICAN GOLDFINCHES Eye disease in American Goldfinches. December 8, 2016. FeederWatch collected data on eye disease in American Goldfinches for many years and then stopped because the prevalence of disease in goldfinches was minimal. Last season a number of FeederWatchers wrote to tell us they were seeing an increase in eye disease in American Goldfinches.FEEDERWATCH
FeederWatch - Count Feeder Birds for Science. Embrace the Winter. Count Feeder Birds for Science! Join, Renew or Donate. Put Up a Feeder. Count Birds. Enter Your Data. WELCOME TO FEEDERWATCH Thank you for supporting Project FeederWatch. You are signed up for next season, which runs from November 13, 2021, through April 30, 2022. In the fall we will ship instructional materials to first-time participants and calendars to renewing participants, unless you opted out of receiving print materials. Materials should arrive by November1, in time
JOIN, RENEW, OR DONATE Observe the birds outside your windows and contribute to science by joining Project FeederWatch. Join now for the 2021–22 FeederWatch season, which begins November 13. Please join the project for the country in which you reside. In the fall we will ship instructional materials to first-time participants, including our double-sided poster illustrating birds commonly seen USE THE FEEDERWATCH APP OR A TALLY SHEET Common Feeder Birds Interactive. Explore the winter distribution, food, and feeder preferences of common feeder birds.FEEDERWATCH APP
Download the app The FeederWatch app is available for both Apple and Android mobile devices. The app is free to registered FeederWatch participants. If you haven’t signed up for FeederWatch, join now. What you will find in the app You can use the FeederWatch app toSUBMIT YOUR COUNTS
Submit your counts. To help us learn more about feeder birds, we need your data–even if you made just one count! If you signed up for Project FeederWatch through our online store, or if you signed up by mail or phone and received your instructional kit in the mail with your ID number, you are ready to plot your count site on our map and start entering counts! HOUSE FINCH EYE DISEASE WHITE-TAILED STARLING August 2, 2020 at 1:03 pm. First time ever white tailed starling in Northeast Michigan! It looks like a weird evolutionary blip – a regular starling in ever other way, with long, solid white tail feathers sticking out prominently! Reply. Joanne says: August 22, 2020at 6:48 am.
WHITE HEADED ROBIN
Description. This is the second time we have seen the white headed Robin. The first time was Jan 7, 2014. The first photo is a cropped from an image my husband took Feb 3, 2014 at 11:53 am. The second photo is a cropped image I took Feb 3, 2014 at 8:35 am, showing this white headed robin in a group of robins and bluebirds. EYE DISEASE IN AMERICAN GOLDFINCHES Eye disease in American Goldfinches. December 8, 2016. FeederWatch collected data on eye disease in American Goldfinches for many years and then stopped because the prevalence of disease in goldfinches was minimal. Last season a number of FeederWatchers wrote to tell us they were seeing an increase in eye disease in American Goldfinches.FEEDERWATCH
FeederWatch - Count Feeder Birds for Science. Embrace the Winter. Count Feeder Birds for Science! Join, Renew or Donate. Put Up a Feeder. Count Birds. Enter Your Data. WELCOME TO FEEDERWATCH Thank you for supporting Project FeederWatch. You are signed up for next season, which runs from November 13, 2021, through April 30, 2022. In the fall we will ship instructional materials to first-time participants and calendars to renewing participants, unless you opted out of receiving print materials. Materials should arrive by November1, in time
JOIN, RENEW, OR DONATE Observe the birds outside your windows and contribute to science by joining Project FeederWatch. Join now for the 2021–22 FeederWatch season, which begins November 13. Please join the project for the country in which you reside. In the fall we will ship instructional materials to first-time participants, including our double-sided poster illustrating birds commonly seen USE THE FEEDERWATCH APP OR A TALLY SHEET Common Feeder Birds Interactive. Explore the winter distribution, food, and feeder preferences of common feeder birds.FEEDERWATCH APP
Download the app The FeederWatch app is available for both Apple and Android mobile devices. The app is free to registered FeederWatch participants. If you haven’t signed up for FeederWatch, join now. What you will find in the app You can use the FeederWatch app toSUBMIT YOUR COUNTS
Submit your counts. To help us learn more about feeder birds, we need your data–even if you made just one count! If you signed up for Project FeederWatch through our online store, or if you signed up by mail or phone and received your instructional kit in the mail with your ID number, you are ready to plot your count site on our map and start entering counts! HOUSE FINCH EYE DISEASE WHITE-TAILED STARLING August 2, 2020 at 1:03 pm. First time ever white tailed starling in Northeast Michigan! It looks like a weird evolutionary blip – a regular starling in ever other way, with long, solid white tail feathers sticking out prominently! Reply. Joanne says: August 22, 2020at 6:48 am.
WHITE HEADED ROBIN
Description. This is the second time we have seen the white headed Robin. The first time was Jan 7, 2014. The first photo is a cropped from an image my husband took Feb 3, 2014 at 11:53 am. The second photo is a cropped image I took Feb 3, 2014 at 8:35 am, showing this white headed robin in a group of robins and bluebirds. EYE DISEASE IN AMERICAN GOLDFINCHES Eye disease in American Goldfinches. December 8, 2016. FeederWatch collected data on eye disease in American Goldfinches for many years and then stopped because the prevalence of disease in goldfinches was minimal. Last season a number of FeederWatchers wrote to tell us they were seeing an increase in eye disease in American Goldfinches.FEEDERWATCH APP
Download the app The FeederWatch app is available for both Apple and Android mobile devices. The app is free to registered FeederWatch participants. If you haven’t signed up for FeederWatch, join now. What you will find in the app You can use the FeederWatch app to RARE BIRDS - FEEDERWATCH Rare Bird Reports If you see a rare bird during one of your FeederWatch counts, attach a photo with your report, and it will automatically be displayed here once the report is confirmed. If you see a rare bird on a non-count day and you would like to share a photoof the bird, please
SUBMIT YOUR COUNTS
Submit your counts. To help us learn more about feeder birds, we need your data–even if you made just one count! If you signed up for Project FeederWatch through our online store, or if you signed up by mail or phone and received your instructional kit in the mail with your ID number, you are ready to plot your count site on our map and start entering counts!COMMON FEEDER BIRDS
We’ve put together a list of almost 100 common feeder birds and cross referenced what they like to eat and where they like to eat it. Explore your region to see what you AMERICAN TREE SPARROW AND CHIPPING SPARROW American Tree Sparrow. Chipping Sparrow. Overall. This sparrow (6.25″ long, 16 cm) looks similar in summer and winter. It has a rusty cap and a rusty eye line, a bicolored bill, and a breast spot that is sometimes hidden. In summer this slightly smaller sparrow (5.5″ long, 14 cm) has a chestnut cap, a distinct white eyebrow andblack
UNUSUAL BIRDS
Among the most difficult birds to identify are the birds that have abnormal plumage or other characteristics, whether it be color variation, a bill deformity, or missing head feathers. These variations aren’t in any field guides, and sometimes the abnormality removes key field marks. If you see a strange-looking bird, use size,shape, and behavior
MOURNING DOVE WITH WHITE TAIL John Repasy says: April 18, 2021 at 2:15 pm. Just watching a morning dove with a white tail, but the top of its head is light grey blue. I have noticed a dove with a white tail off and on all winter, but this is the first that I’ve noticed to top of its head being a different colour. I live in Woodstock Ontario Canada. GRACKLE WITH WHITE FEATHERS Description. This is a photo of a grackle with white facial feathers. There were at least three such grackles at our feeders at various times – all three have slightly different white feathers, so I was able to tell there was more than one. One has just a spot of them above its beak, another has white feathers just around its eyes and athird
LOGIN SCREEN
Common Feeder Birds Interactive. Explore the winter distribution, food, and feeder preferences of common feeder birds. EYE DISEASE IN AMERICAN GOLDFINCHES Eye disease in American Goldfinches. December 8, 2016. FeederWatch collected data on eye disease in American Goldfinches for many years and then stopped because the prevalence of disease in goldfinches was minimal. Last season a number of FeederWatchers wrote to tell us they were seeing an increase in eye disease in American Goldfinches.FEEDERWATCH
FeederWatch - Count Feeder Birds for Science. Embrace the Winter. Count Feeder Birds for Science! Join, Renew or Donate. Put Up a Feeder. Count Birds. Enter Your Data. WELCOME TO FEEDERWATCH Thank you for supporting Project FeederWatch. You are signed up for next season, which runs from November 13, 2021, through April 30, 2022. In the fall we will ship instructional materials to first-time participants and calendars to renewing participants, unless you opted out of receiving print materials. Materials should arrive by November1, in time
JOIN, RENEW, OR DONATE Observe the birds outside your windows and contribute to science by joining Project FeederWatch. Join now for the 2021–22 FeederWatch season, which begins November 13. Please join the project for the country in which you reside. In the fall we will ship instructional materials to first-time participants, including our double-sided poster illustrating birds commonly seenSUBMIT YOUR COUNTS
Submit your counts. To help us learn more about feeder birds, we need your data–even if you made just one count! If you signed up for Project FeederWatch through our online store, or if you signed up by mail or phone and received your instructional kit in the mail with your ID number, you are ready to plot your count site on our map and start entering counts!COMMON FEEDER BIRDS
We’ve put together a list of almost 100 common feeder birds and cross referenced what they like to eat and where they like to eat it. Explore your region to see what you USE THE FEEDERWATCH APP OR A TALLY SHEET Common Feeder Birds Interactive. Explore the winter distribution, food, and feeder preferences of common feeder birds.IDENTIFYING BIRDS
Learning to identify birds. If you are new to birding, start slowly. Study the birds at your feeder until you can identify them at a glance. Then gradually add more birds to your repertoire, always taking time to study them and learn their nuances. Sparrows, shorebirds, and gulls tend to be the most difficult; you may want to save those for last. DETAILED INSTRUCTIONS First count the birds in an imaginary block of typical density. Keep the block small, to include only 10 to 25 birds. Then visually superimpose the block onto the entire flock and estimate how many times it fits. Finally, multiply this number by the number of birds inthe original block.
HOUSE FINCH EYE DISEASE WHITE HEADED HOUSE FINCH Bob & Laurel Musgrave says: July 1, 2015 at 5:50 pm. A white headed finch come to our Gresham, OR feeder this spring and has flocked with the other house finches. The other finches accept this bird, it is neither dominant or subordinate of the other finches. There is onlyone.
FEEDERWATCH
FeederWatch - Count Feeder Birds for Science. Embrace the Winter. Count Feeder Birds for Science! Join, Renew or Donate. Put Up a Feeder. Count Birds. Enter Your Data. WELCOME TO FEEDERWATCH Thank you for supporting Project FeederWatch. You are signed up for next season, which runs from November 13, 2021, through April 30, 2022. In the fall we will ship instructional materials to first-time participants and calendars to renewing participants, unless you opted out of receiving print materials. Materials should arrive by November1, in time
JOIN, RENEW, OR DONATE Observe the birds outside your windows and contribute to science by joining Project FeederWatch. Join now for the 2021–22 FeederWatch season, which begins November 13. Please join the project for the country in which you reside. In the fall we will ship instructional materials to first-time participants, including our double-sided poster illustrating birds commonly seenCOMMON FEEDER BIRDS
We’ve put together a list of almost 100 common feeder birds and cross referenced what they like to eat and where they like to eat it. Explore your region to see what youSUBMIT YOUR COUNTS
Submit your counts. To help us learn more about feeder birds, we need your data–even if you made just one count! If you signed up for Project FeederWatch through our online store, or if you signed up by mail or phone and received your instructional kit in the mail with your ID number, you are ready to plot your count site on our map and start entering counts! USE THE FEEDERWATCH APP OR A TALLY SHEET Common Feeder Birds Interactive. Explore the winter distribution, food, and feeder preferences of common feeder birds.IDENTIFYING BIRDS
Learning to identify birds. If you are new to birding, start slowly. Study the birds at your feeder until you can identify them at a glance. Then gradually add more birds to your repertoire, always taking time to study them and learn their nuances. Sparrows, shorebirds, and gulls tend to be the most difficult; you may want to save those for last. DETAILED INSTRUCTIONS First count the birds in an imaginary block of typical density. Keep the block small, to include only 10 to 25 birds. Then visually superimpose the block onto the entire flock and estimate how many times it fits. Finally, multiply this number by the number of birds inthe original block.
HOUSE FINCH EYE DISEASE WHITE HEADED HOUSE FINCH Bob & Laurel Musgrave says: July 1, 2015 at 5:50 pm. A white headed finch come to our Gresham, OR feeder this spring and has flocked with the other house finches. The other finches accept this bird, it is neither dominant or subordinate of the other finches. There is onlyone.
WELCOME TO FEEDERWATCH Thank you for supporting Project FeederWatch. You are signed up for next season, which runs from November 13, 2021, through April 30, 2022. In the fall we will ship instructional materials to first-time participants and calendars to renewing participants, unless you opted out of receiving print materials. Materials should arrive by November1, in time
FEEDERWATCH APP
Download the app The FeederWatch app is available for both Apple and Android mobile devices. The app is free to registered FeederWatch participants. If you haven’t signed up for FeederWatch, join now. What you will find in the app You can use the FeederWatch app to DETAILED INSTRUCTIONS First count the birds in an imaginary block of typical density. Keep the block small, to include only 10 to 25 birds. Then visually superimpose the block onto the entire flock and estimate how many times it fits. Finally, multiply this number by the number of birds inthe original block.
WHITE-TAILED STARLING August 2, 2020 at 1:03 pm. First time ever white tailed starling in Northeast Michigan! It looks like a weird evolutionary blip – a regular starling in ever other way, with long, solid white tail feathers sticking out prominently! Reply. Joanne says: August 22, 2020at 6:48 am.
MALE CARDINAL WITH DEFORMITIES Description. This Cardinal has been coming to our platform feeder for quite a while. At first I did not discern that its beak was badly deformed and that he was missing his left eye. He finally came to the feeder when I had my camera handy..He seems quite capable of feeding and flying. I have seen a Cardinal wqith missing feathers and greyskin
WHITE HEADED ROBIN
Description. This is the second time we have seen the white headed Robin. The first time was Jan 7, 2014. The first photo is a cropped from an image my husband took Feb 3, 2014 at 11:53 am. The second photo is a cropped image I took Feb 3, 2014 at 8:35 am, showing this white headed robin in a group of robins and bluebirds.WHITE BLUE JAY
First white blue jay we’ve ever seen. Mackinaw City, Mi. 05/25/2018. Reply. Lisa says: June 11, 2018 at 9:12 am. This is called Leucism, or leukism. It is an abnormal plumage condition caused by a genetic mutation that prevents pigment, particularly melanin, from being properly deposited on a bird’s feathers.LOGIN SCREEN
Common Feeder Birds Interactive. Explore the winter distribution, food, and feeder preferences of common feeder birds. RARE BLUE HEADED MALLARD :-) December 25, 2018 at 9:40 pm. I photographed a blue-purple headed Mallard in two locations in Minnesota in the early Spring of 2018. One was swimming in a waste-water pond in St. Paul MN and the other was photographed at a park in Richfield MN. They are stunning and veryrare.
CASSIN'S FINCH, HOUSE FINCH, AND PURPLE FINCH Cassin’s Finch, House Finch, and Purple Finch. The identification of these three finches of the Carpodacus genus can be extremely difficult. Each species is about the same size and shape, and each is a common visitor to feeders within its respective range. The males each have varying shades of red or purple along with brown and whitecoloring
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FEEDING BIRDS
Find out about types of feeders and types of foods, and where to placeyour feeder
Feeding Birds FAQs
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COMMON FEEDER BIRDS INTERACTIVE Explore the winter distribution, food, and feeder preferences of common feeder birds.*
UNUSUAL BIRDS
Find out about color and plumage variations, bald heads, and deformedbills
Unusual Birds Gallery*
SICK BIRDS AND BIRD DISEASES Find out about bird disease and identifying the signs of bird diseaseSick Birds Gallery
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IDENTIFYING BIRDS
Find out how to identify birds and download identification tools*
EDUCATIONAL AND HOME SCHOOL RESOURCES Find educational resources and examples and home school curriculumhere
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MORE ARTICLES
Find an article archive packed with lots of great bird studyinformation
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HOUSE FINCH EYE DISEASE Learn about house finch eye diseaseTRICKY BIRD IDS
* American Tree Sparrow and Chipping Sparrow * Black-capped Chickadee and Carolina Chickadee * Cassin’s Finch, House Finch, and Purple Finch* Common Doves
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WILD BIRDS UNLIMITED BIRDSPOTTER PHOTO CONTEST 2019–20 Enter our weekly challenges for chances at great prizes!2018–2019 winners
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OUR BLOG
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PARTICIPANT PHOTOS
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FEEDERWATCH CAM
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FEATURED PARTICIPANTS These are exemplary FeederWatchers!* Participant FAQs
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MAP ROOM
View maps showing the current and past winter distributions of birds*
TOP 25 BIRDS
See what birds occur the most by region*
BIRD SUMMARIES BY STATE/PROVINCE Explore species by state/province*
PARTICIPANT MAP
See where FeederWatchers are*
TREND GRAPHS
Graphs of regional population trends and distributions*
SCIENTIFIC ARTICLES
Explore papers that have used FeederWatch data*
RARE BIRD GALLERY
See birds well outside their winter range submitted to ProjectFeederWatch.
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YEAR-END REPORTS
Lab scientists analyze the data submitted by FeederWatch participants.* Raw Data Requests
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ENTER AND REVIEW YOUR DATA Start here for data entry and personal data review and exploration EMBRACE THE WINTER. COUNT FEEDER BIRDS FOR SCIENCE! Join, Renew or Donate* Put Up a Feeder
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DATA REPORTS AND STORIES More Data To Explore*
Bird Summaries by State/Province*
Participant Map
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Map Room
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MORE TO EXPLORE
COMMON FEEDER BIRDS
BIRDSPOTTER 2019-20
TRICKY BIRD IDS
OUR BLOG
FEEDERWATCH CAM
RECENT PARTICIPANT PHOTOS*
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See All
FROM OUR BLOG
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2019-2020 BIRDSPOTTER GRAND PRIZE WINNERS!March 13, 2020
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BIRDING WITH A NEWBORN: BIRDSPOTTER DATA ENTRYMarch 06, 2020
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POTPOURRI: BIRDSPOTTER JUDGES’ CHOICE WINNERFebruary 28, 2020
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POTPOURRI: BIRDSPOTTER PEOPLE’S CHOICE WINNERFebruary 28, 2020
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BORING IS BEAUTIFUL: BIRDSPOTTER JUDGES’ CHOICE WINNERFebruary 21, 2020
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BORING IS BEAUTIFUL: BIRDSPOTTER PEOPLE’S CHOICE WINNERFebruary 21, 2020
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