Skillbuilder 2: ID That Bird! Using Field Guides

Similar documents
Skillbuilder 2: ID That Bird! Using Field Guides

Behavioral Adaptations

Basic Bird Classification. Mia Spangenberg. Goal: Identify 30 species

HUNGRYLAND BIRD LIST

WVWA 2018 Wissahickon Birdathon Checklist

Wings N Wetlands Bird List

Bird Observations. Date Range: For. 1 of 5 2/29/2016 8:36 AM. Home About Submit Observations Explore Data My ebird Help

Ute Mountain Mesa Verde Birding Festival Bird Species Tally May 10 14, 2017

Greater White-fronted Goose Snow Goose** Brant Cackling Goose Canada Goose Cackling/Canada - undifferentiated goose sp.

Bird Field Guides. Summary: Students will explore field guides by identifying local bird species and their characteristics.

Nova Scotia Christmas Bird Count 2014

Black-bellied Whistling Duck Fulvous Whistling-Duck Gadwall American Wigeon Mallard Mottled Duck Blue-winged Teal Cinnamon Teal Northern Shoveler

Birds are the most vivid expression of life Roger Tory Peterson

Commonly Seen Birds of the Prescott Area

Ute Mountain Mesa Verde Birding Festival Bird Species Tally May 9-13, 2018

Tenoroc. Bird List. Symbols used in this checklist. Tenoroc. Wildlife Management Area. Type. Seasons. Breeding. How you can help

Black-bellied Whistling Duck X X Fulvous Whistling Duck Canada Goose X X X X X Trumpeter Swan X X Wood

Observers: Herb Knüfken, Bob Glaser, Frank Wong, Kathy Dickey, Eva Armi, Gary Grantham, Ingo Renner, John Bruin, and Anonymous. Total of species 89

Area 5 (east) Area 1a (west) Area 1b (east) Area 2 Area 3 Area 4

Egg Dates for Species that Breed in the SAAS Chapter Area

PHOTOGRAPHY. Birding Hotspots of UConn and the Surrounding Area JAMES ADAMS. 9 Merrow Meadow Park Fenton River.7. 5 New Storrs Cemetery 4

Observers: David Blue, Will Cox, Kathy Estey, Blair Francis, Don Grine, and Herb Knufken

HRA 2014/15 FIELD TRIP DATA

Jaeger sp. 1 White-faced Ibis 2 Peregrine Falcon 1 Lincoln's Sparrow 4 bold

Rancocas Birds Bar Graphs

Tour 14: Yellow Jkt Cyn and Cyn of the Ancients Guest Ranch. Tour 12: Nature Center at Butler Corner 1/2 Day. Tour 11: Pontoon on McPhee Reservoir

Breeding Safe Dates Sorted by Species

The Birds of Eastshore State Park

Count Summary Report

Snake River Float Project Summary of Observations 2013

Christmas Bird Count

H. Thomas Bartlett Kelleys Island Monthly Census Data

Species Lists / Bird Walk Dates X= Species Seen, ssp or morph noted; X New Species at CCNHC; X First of Season Migrant

Fort Bragg CBC. 0cw. Area 5 (Joleen) Area 6 Area 7 Area 8 Area 9 Feeders. Area 5 (Art) 2a (tracks) Area 3 Area 4. Area 5 (Erica)

Last Reported Date (Date, Location, Number)

10 th Annual Mono Basin Bird Chautauqua Sightings 2011 All Chautauqua Field Trips and Chautauqua Week

x x x x x x x Green-winged Teal x x x x x x x Canvasback x x x x x x x Redhead x x x x x x Ring-necked Duck x x x x x x x Greater Scaup

APPENDIX 5F BIRD AND WILDLIFE POINT COUNTS AND AREA SEARCH SURVEYS BY HABITAT TYPE

Date: April, 20, 2013 Location: Lake Conestee Nature Park, 601 Fork Shoals Rd, Greenville, S.C.

Checklist of birds on Nebraska farms

ZELLWOOD BIRD COUNTS FEBRUARY, 2017

Observers: Blair Francis, Eva Armi, Frank Wong, Phillip White, Amrit Sidhu, David Mathis, Barbara Dunn, Gary Grantham, and Anonymous

Circle: Cheep Thrills Count date: 12/15/2011 Count Code: CACT Total Species Count: 164

Team Form including for Feeder Watchers

Escondido Draw Recreation Area Crockett County, TX M= Spring or Fall Migrant. Bird Species Type

Table 1b. Coverage and Capture Rates During 2018 Fall MM at IBS

Bird Challenge Update

How Are an Owl's Adaptations Different From Other Birds'?

Pocahontas County Bird List. Loons. Grebes. Cormorants. Herons & Bitterns

Birds of the Raccoon River: What They Tell Us about Ecosystems & Ecological Change

ZELLWOOD BIRD COUNTS JUNE, 2016

BirdWalk Newsletter Walk conducted by Perry Nugent Written by Jayne J Matney

1. Bur Oak Picnic Area. A year-round hot spot for viewing songbirds and raptors.

Black Swamp Bird Observatory Navarre, Ottawa NWR Banding Station Spring 2016

Click on column heading to sort by that category.

Point Grey Tidal Marsh Project Standwatch Surveys February 20, 2014 to March 26, 2014

From wild bird, to photograph, to painting, renowned wildlife artist Don Edwards will share his process for creating realistic works of art.

CHASSAHOWITZKA BIRD LIST

This was a short trip designed to get my first experience of North America Warblers and whatever else might be around.

Pre-Visit Lesson Neotropical Migratory Birds Identifying Birds

A survey of Birds of Forest Park in Everett, Washington

Washington State Park Bird Census 2017

Yearly Total Summary, Birds Banded, 1995 through 2012 Dan Brown's Hummer Ranch, Christoval, Texas Listed in Phylogenetic Order

Activity #15: The Tale of Chipilo Indoor Team Bird Watching

Ornithology (B/C) Sample Tournament

Passenger Pigeon. In This Issue. Newsletter of the Cincinnati Bird Club. January Program. January Field Trip. January Best Bird Contest

2017 Monterey Bay Birding Festival Checklist

Birds of the Quiet Corner

Friends of the Mississippi River 46 East Fourth Street, Suite 606 Saint Paul, MN / FAX: 651/

Purpose of this Study. Field Sites

FLORIDA BREEDING BIRD ATLAS GUIDELINES FOR SAFE DATES FOR SELECTED BREEDING CODES. BBA Newsletter Number 6, May 1988 and subsequent updates.

Canton - Emiquon and Area

Palmer Hay Flats. Audubon Important Bird Area and State Game Refuge BIRD CHECKLIST.

PASSENGER PIGEON. Field Trip: Ohio River East of Cincinnati. facebook CINCINNATI BIRD CLUB

Bluebonnet Bird Monitoring Project 2012 Annual Report

2003 ANALYSIS OF AVIAN GUILD SPECIES DIVERSITY IN THE CARMEL RIVER RIPARIAN CORRIDOR. Twelfth Annual Report

A Practical Challenge for Atlasers: Identifying Juvenile Birds

Bird Beak Bonanza. Objectives from North Carolina Standard Course of Study: investigations to build an understanding of animal behavior and

Point-count Surveys of Bird Use in Olema Marsh Spring and Autumn A report to the Point Reyes National Seashore

BirdWalk Newsletter

WOW 2016 Species List

Page 1 of 6. Chicago Ornithological Society: North Pond Bird Walks # weeks seen # individuals 11/13/ /18/2019

Database corrections for the 50th Christmas Bird Count 1

Monitoring Avian Productivity and Survival (MAPS) at Witty s Lagoon Regional Park 2013

CBC Year Count Season

Black Swamp Bird Observatory Navarre Banding Station Fall 2014 Passerine Migration Monitoring Latitude 413 Longitude 0830

Off Blns Stin MBch Tenn Crnk Saus MVMr Strw Tib CMMr SRaf TLnd Frfx Alpn Red-throated Loon Pacific Loon Common

Great Blue Heron Great Egret Snowy Egret Little Blue Heron Tricolored Heron* Cattle Egret Green Heron Black-crowned Night-Heron Yellow-crowned Night-

Ruby-throated Hummingbird Black Rail* Clapper Rail* King Rail Virginia Rail Sora Common Gallinule American Coot Sandhill Crane Black-necked Stilt*

MIGRATION MONITORING AT PRINCE EDWARD POINT FALL 2013

Double-crested Cormorant fairly common migrant/winter visitor to ponds

I know that during the winter you migrate. But where do you come from in the spring?

Comparing Adaptations of Birds

2009 Grassland Bird Survey Report

Come one! Come All! Join the Fun! It is the season for The National Audubon Society 116th Annual Christmas Count.

Bird Checklist. Red-throated Common. Loons. Pied-billed Horned Red-necked. Grebes. Sooty Manx. Northern Fulmar Cory s Greater.

BIRDS OF THE DELMARVA PENINSULA, DE - MD - VA

Avian Studies for the Sanilac County Michigan Wind Power Project: Summary of 2007 Field Seasons - Annual Report

BirdWalk Newsletter

AMHERST COLLEGE BIRD SURVEY (116 species total) Submitted Oct 31, 2008, by Pete Westover, Conservation Works, LLC

Transcription:

Bioblitz Skillbuilders: Learning and Applying the Skills of a Naturalist Skillbuilder 2: ID That Bird! Using Field Guides Key Question How can we use field guides to identify common birds? Objectives Students will understand how binoculars function. Students will practice observation skills through identifying field markings. Students will identify birds using field guide. Grades: 2-5 Time: 15-20 minutes Location: Classroom Materials Data sheet or journal, Binoculars (optional) Bird cutouts (attached) Projector Bird field guides (recommended field guides: National Geographic, Peterson, any tri-fold) Background The Cornell Lab of Ornithology All About Birds has excellent resources for beginner birding. Click the following links to learn more about: Bird ID Skills Bird Names and Shapes Searchable Bird Guide Preparation Print cutouts of common birds (attached) For each bird, write the family or order of birds to help students narrow their search in the field guide. For example, write sparrows for Eastern towhee or gulls and terns for Laughing gull. If using multiple brands of field guide, be sure that the family or order names are the same across guides. Place bird cutouts around classroom, gymnasium, or somewhere outside that is visible from classroom. Birds should be placed at a distance appropriate for students to use binoculars. Set up one pair of binoculars and field guide per group. 1

Directions 1. Place students in groups of two to three. Explain that the U.S. is home nearly 1,000 species of bird they are everywhere! But we need to observe very carefully in order to find birds. 2. Project one bird photo on screen and demonstrate how binoculars are used. Then, ask students: a. What are some characteristics, or field markings of this bird that might help us to identify it? b. Does it have a crest, bright colors, a long tail, a unique bill? c. And does this bird remind you of any other birds you have seen? Similar species of birds are organized in groups like ducks, gulls, birds of prey, and songbirds. 3. Next, demonstrate using the field guide index to find the bird group, then open to that page and scan through, asking class if they see the bird. Finally, check the range of the bird on the map to see if the bird spends time in Florida. If the students think they already know the identification, show them where to find the glossary to find the page of that bird. 4. Students will walk around the room or stand at a window. One student will scan with binoculars and the other will hold the field guide and observation sheet. The student with binoculars should scan for birds, then switch with his/her partner, until they find a bird. Partners can use the index of the field guide to find the group of birds their bird is in. They should discuss and write down THREE characteristics to compare to the birds in that group in a journal or notebook. Some key field markings are size, shape, and color pattern. For example: The bird is in the raptor group: it is predominantly white, long-narrow wings, and forked tail (Swallow-tailed kite). 5. Once they make an identification, they should write it next to the three characteristics they observed. The group can look for another bird. 6. Review birds, including the field markings students observed and the species identified. Next Generation Science Standards Performance Expectations 2-LS4-1. Make observations of plants and animals to compare the diversity of life in different habitats. 2-PS1-1. Plan and conduct an investigation to describe and classify different kinds of materials by their observable properties. K-2-ETS1-2. Develop a simple sketch, drawing, or physical model to illustrate how the shape of an object helps it function as needed to solve a given problem. 3-LS3-2. Use evidence to support the explanation that traits can be influenced by the environment. 3-LS3-1. Analyze and interpret data to provide evidence that plants and animals have traits inherited from parents and that variation of these traits exists in a group of similar organisms. 2

4-LS1-1. Construct an argument that plants and animals have internal and external structures that function to support survival, growth, behavior, and reproduction. Science and Engineering Practices Asking questions and defining problems Analyzing and Interpreting Data Obtaining, Evaluating, and Communicating Information This activity was developed by the Encyclopedia of Life Learning + Education Group as part of the Okaloosa SCIENCE grant, supported by the Department of Defense Education Activity (DoDEA) under Award No. H#1254-14-1-0004. Opinions, interpretations, conclusions, and recommendations are those of the author and are not necessarily endorsed by the Department of Defense. Learn more about this grant at: www.okaloosaschools.com/okaloosascience/ 3

Example Bird Images + Groups Red-tailed Hawk Buteo jamaicensis Raptors or Birds of Prey Group (Eagles, Hawks, Falcons) 4

Blue Jay Cyanocitta cristata Corvids Group (Ravens, Crows, Jays) 5

Ruby-throated Hummingbird Archilochus colubris Hummingbirds Group 6

Northern Flicker Colaptes auratus Woodpeckers Group 7

Killdeer Charadrius vociferus Shorebirds Group (Plovers, Sandpipers, Oystercatchers, Avocets) Plovers Group (Family Charadriidae) 8

Cedar Waxwing Bombycilla cedrorum Order Passeriformes (Songbirds group: blackbirds, warblers, sparrows, finches, etc.) Family Bombycillidae (Waxwings) 9

Brown-headed Cowbird Molothrus ater Order Passeriformes (Songbirds Group: blackbirds, warblers, sparrows, finches, etc.) Family Icteridae (Blackbirds) Image Credits: Red-tailed Hawk: Sandy/Chuck Harris via Flickr, CC-BY-NC; Blue Jay: e_monk via Flickr, CC-BY-NC-SA; Rubythroated Hummingbird: Russ Wigh via Flickr, CC-BY-NC-SA; Northern; Flicker: Keith Williams via Flickr, CC-BY-NC; Killdeer: Sandy/Chuck Harris via Flickr, CC-BY-NC; Cedar Waxwing: David Rosen via Flickr, CC-BY-NC; Brown-headed Cowbird: eyespywithmy via Flickr, CC-BY-NC 10