Thanks Carl for the summary. I have questions about FB (I’m on it, but rarely 
look at it), but my main question is how can I know which groups there are, ie, 
is there a way to get a list of bird-related groups to see which ones I am 
interested in, as well as which new ones are being constantly added? Hopefully 
this can occur without having to plow through the annoying requests to sign up 
or re-sign up or re-set password etc from Microsoft Google, and FB.

Ross


Ross Silcock
Seasonal Reports Compiler
Nebraska Bird Review
Co-Author “Birds of Nebraska- Online”
https://www.birdsofnebraska.org
Tabor, IA
402-618-4933




From: cobirds@googlegroups.com <cobirds@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of Carl 
Bendorf
Sent: Thursday, December 6, 2018 11:08 AM
To: Colorado Birds <cobirds@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [cobirds] Thoughts on rare bird communications - a conversation 
starter and a suggestion

The current debate about rare bird communications in Colorado is very 
interesting.  First, there is the current discussion related to the Larimer 
County Gyrfalcon.  I'm fairly certain these exact same debates have taken place 
in nearly every state and province.  Many of us have all seen the rise and fall 
of various technologies and communication systems (email chains, websites, 
listservs, text alerts, etc.) but the thorny issues of what to report and when 
to report remain.  I doubt that technology will ever eliminate this aspect of 
the debate and it's important we continue discussing the ethics of reporting 
rare birds.

At the same time, there is a discussion underway about our methods of sharing 
information in a timely and efficient manner.  When I started birding in Iowa 
the late 70's, we tried to create an organized phone tree with a paper chart 
showing who would call whom and so on.  Of course, the communication chain 
often broke down when someone was out of town or just not at home to answer the 
phone.  A lot of people didn't even have home answering machines back then and, 
of course, reporting a rare bird meant driving to the nearest pay phone and 
dropping in quarters to make a call.  In the early 80s, we started a rare bird 
alert using an answering machine located in my parents' garage.   Part of the 
trick was finding a machine that offered an extended outgoing message as many 
answering machines were limited to perhaps 30 seconds.  We put the machine in 
my parents' garage because they lived in a small town where the local phone 
company offered a very low monthly phone bill for a second phone line.   As 
technology changed, these recorded rare bird alerts using phone lines have 
essentially disappeared.

In my view, for many birders, Facebook has become the rare bird communication 
platform of choice since it offers features like the ability to quickly post 
photos/recordings, a role for a moderator(s), presence on both millions of 
smartphones, laptops, and desktops, and the fact that millions of people are 
already on their Facebook accounts every day.

A great example is the ABA Rare Bird Alert Facebook page 
(https://www.facebook.com/groups/ABArare/) which has grown tremendously (18,000 
members.)  It's amazing to watch as bird sightings are being updated in real 
time and you can even see groups of birders in the field using this page to 
communicate with each other in real time.  The page has at least 7 
administrators meaning the work of monitoring the flow of info is being shared 
and doesn't become a major burden.  Heck, you can even livestream a video of 
your rare bird to the entire audience.

One of the features of the (very helpful) COBIRDS Google Group is that the 
content is generated from the individual submissions of contributors.  I also 
really like the compiled RBA report but the downside there is it requires a 
compiler or compilers willing to put in the major effort of gathering, 
collating, typing up, and posting of a report.  As we've seen, it's going to be 
increasingly hard to find someone who is willing to put in all that work.   
Also, the effort of collating and posting a compiled RBA inevitably adds a 
time-delay to reports.

This long missive is my suggestion that perhaps Colorado needs a dedicated Rare 
Bird Facebook Page with multiple moderators.  Again, the ABA is using this 
model very successfully by having three separate Facebook pages.  Each page has 
a different defined purpose (this is critical, I think):

1.  A general Facebook page for the organization for non-urgent information and 
sharing of a general nature:  https://www.facebook.com/birders/

2.  An extremely successful page for helping people identify birds--this page 
has a very clearly defined purpose and has nearly 34,000 members!  
https://www.facebook.com/groups/whatsthisbird/   And, I understand a number of 
extreme rarities have been “discovered” from the postings of photos from 
contributors who couldn’t identify what they had seen/photographed.

3.  The above-mentioned ABA Rare Bird Alert with about 18,000 members:  
https://www.facebook.com/groups/whatsthisbird/

I imagine one of the points of view on this issue will be that not everyone 
uses (or wants to use) Facebook.  But this has been true of every form of 
communication through the years.  I’m sure at one time there were those who 
preferred to communicate by letter and not by telephone followed by those who 
preferred to communicate about rare birds by land line telephone and felt left 
behind by the cell phone followed by those who were happy with a call on their 
cell phone but objected to needing a smart phone, and so on.  Consider also how 
many local bird club newsletters used to include a compilation of recent rare 
bird sightings in a printed/mailed newsletter.  You don’t see that so much 
anymore.

My suggestion to those who don’t wish to use Facebook is to recruit a 
Facebook-using birding friend who will give them a call when a rare bird is 
reported via Facebook.  What do you want to bet that someday Facebook fades 
away as it’s replaced by yet another kind of technology.

In conclusion, I think a Colorado Rare Bird Alert Facebook page could work 
really well.  A Facebook page offers all the latest options in terms of social 
communication, immediacy, widespread use.  The content would be user-generated 
(and not require a volunteer compiler), and the moderating responsibilities can 
be shared among a group of volunteers.

Please don't think I am advocating for an end to either COBIRDS or the COBIRDS 
RBA report.  Typically, where there are overlapping technologies and 
communication outlets, there is a lot of cross-posting across the platforms as 
a way to broaden the reach.  And all of this is an evolution and not a 
revolution!

I hope this helps to advance the discussion about how we can improve our 
collaboration and sharing about Colorado's fantastic birding opportunities.

What do YOU think?

Carl Bendorf
Longmont

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