10/04/2019
EuroBirdPortal
LIVE – a free, web-based tool that provides a fascinating insight into the
movements across Europe – has been launched this week. The portal allows the
user to watch the northward migration of some 105 species, including Common
Cuckoo and Swallow, via a
live viewing programme. Animated maps are updated daily based on roughly
120,000 observations from birders across the region.
Birders
submitting their observations to BirdTrack will be contributing to this
exciting project and, over the course of a year, around 45 million new
observations are added, providing an unprecedented near real-time view of the
movements of migrants as they arrive in Europe from further south and move
north with the progression of spring. Gabriel Gargallo, EuroBirdPortal (EBP)
project coordinator, said: "With the huge improvements in terms of
coverage, data quality and connectivity accomplished during the last three
years thanks to the EU LIFE grant, the EBP project has made a big step forward.
"Now
we have better data, vital to properly understand the seasonal patterns of bird
distribution in Europe and their changes over time, and it is readily
available, providing unique opportunities to develop novel applications of
conservation and management concern (for example, predicting wildfowl movements
due to cold spells or improving the surveillance of avian-borne diseases).
"But
all this would not be possible without the more than 120,000 volunteer
birdwatchers regularly sharing their observations with the different online
portals. The LIVE version of the EBP viewer recognises their vital role in the
project and showcases how such individual and local contributions can be nicely
summed up to help unravel the large-scale seasonal distributional patterns of
our birds."
Scott
Mayson, BirdTrack Organiser at BTO, added: "It is great to see the
observations of birdwatchers contributing to this amazing project. I have
always wanted to be able to follow a bird such as a Swallow as it migrates and
now I can. This is citizen science at its very best."
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