Abstract

Birdwatching is a rapidly growing pastime, increasingly involving the pursuit of rare birds as birders build lists of species they encounter. We expected reports of rare bird discoveries to quickly draw birders to locations, and that the increased attention at those locations would decay over time. We hypothesized that magnitude of draw and rates of decay would vary depending on characteristics of the species and the geographic locations where rarities were discovered. Discoveries of additional rarities might affect both the draw and decay, so we also quantified empirical evidence for the Patagonia Picnic Table Effect (PPTE), a social feedback loop where rarity discoveries are presumed to lead to additional rarity discoveries because of the elevated levels of birder activity once an initial rarity is reported. Although commonly invoked, supporting evidence for the PPTE hypothesis is anecdotal. We used 10 years of eBird data (2008–2017) in the United States to (1) understand birding activity when rarities were reported and the factors associated with draw and decay, and (2) assess the frequency at which initial rarity discoveries lead to reports of additional rarities. Across 273 rarity events, birder effort, as indexed by numbers of eBird checklists, increased above the pre-event baseline level, with the magnitude of draw varying geographically. We found no indication that draw was influenced by species identity or rarity-level, but latitude and distance to small airport proved important in drawing additional eBirders to rare bird discoveries. Mean draw of rarities and mean number of checklists from the same locations prior to each rarity discovery grew through the ten years, suggesting an increased influence of eBird on birder behavior in general. Decay rates in birder effort were more gradual in rare bird events with longer durations. Effort declined below baseline-levels after rarities went undetected, suggesting, “location-fatigue” following rarity events. Results did not support the PPTE hypothesis. Controlling for site-specific circumstances, birders had no better chance of finding additional rarities during events than at times outside events. Our results emphasize that eBird checklist quantity at rarity events follows a predictable but variable pattern of draw and decay influenced by location and time since rarity discovery; that birders have statistically similar chances of finding rarities during normal “baseline” birding activities as they do when known rarities are present; and that eBird represents a largely untapped resource for studying factors that influence levels of birding activity.

Highlights

  • Birdwatchers, otherwise known as birders, are one of the fastest growing public groups with special interests in biological diversity (Cordell & Herbert, 2002; Wood et al, 2011)

  • Though previous work (Courter et al, 2013) has indicated that weekend bias in crowd-sourced bird data reporting has decreased over time in North America, our results show that weekends were important for explaining eBirder dynamics over the 10 years covered in our study as the highest number of checklists during rarity events were predicted on weekends (Table 2)

  • We have learned that the draw of rare birds in the United States has increased with the rise in eBird use over the past decade, resulting in more eBirders chasing rarities soon after they are first detected and reducing attention to locations after rarity detections cease

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Summary

Introduction

Birdwatchers, otherwise known as birders, are one of the fastest growing public groups with special interests in biological diversity (Cordell & Herbert, 2002; Wood et al, 2011). In the United States alone, birders contribute billions of dollars to the economy each year, largely from expenditures for supplies and travel; and they are influential voices in their communities, affecting environmental policies (McFarlane & Boxall, 1996; Carver, 2009; Carver, 2011; USFWS, 2016) Understanding their activities and motivations can improve conservation efforts, assessment of their scientific contributions, and identify methods to motivate engagement with ornithological research (Tarrant, Bright & Cordell, 1997; Ma et al, 2013; Steven et al, 2017; Bennett et al, 2017). It is this group of birders who ‘‘chase’’ rarities ( known as ‘‘twitchers’’ in some parts of the world) (Connell, 2009; Brock et al, 2020) that is the focus of our study

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