I am the most well-traveled birder I know. In the past week alone, I have seen Torrent Ducks in the Urubamba River in Peru, watched an Ivory Gull fly over the ice floes in Nunavut, and witnessed a Black Kite alight on a perch in Queensland, Australia. I鈥檝e watched tiny, endangered Cobb鈥檚 Wrens scatter under my feet on a beach in the Falkland Islands. I鈥檝e seen condors soar in the Andes.
I鈥檝e been to all seven continents in the past seven days without getting a single immunization or enduring a moment of jetlag. I haven鈥檛 even left my chair. I am a Google Street View Birder.
Google Street View is, of course, the massive collection of panoramic images displayed on Google Maps that permits the user to take a virtual trip down more than 10 million miles of mapped streets and trails across more than 80 countries.
I did what I think most people did when they first learned of Google Street View in the late 2000s: I tried and failed to see myself standing in front of my house. I wasn鈥檛 home, I guess (probably birding), or the resolution of those early cameras wasn鈥檛 quite good enough to see myself. After that, I did not do what most other people did, which was close the window and go back to work. Instead, I looked for birds.
The idiosyncrasies of Google Street View birding quickly become evident. You know there are birds out there because it鈥檚 the real world and there are birds everywhere, but the scenery is empty for eternities. You creep along a road, painstakingly pointing and clicking and swinging the camera around hoping to see something perched on a fencepost or a wire, and when you finally do find a bird, it鈥檚 often a tiny dark blob, too small to be picked up clearly by the Street View camera. There鈥檚 a temporal element in addition to the geographic: Each new image is a few meters apart but also a few seconds apart, meaning that a flying bird that appears in the sky in one frame might have turned or dived in the next, out of sight.
Though frustrating, it does occasionally work. I found a first set of images鈥攂irds like Laughing Gulls in Florida and a Great Egret in Texas鈥攊n 2013 and to my blog. Other posts followed in the coming years, mostly when I had a slow day at the office or some time to kill. At that time, Google was introducing images taken on foot with a backpack-mounted camera, and I found some incredible captures in and the , as well as specific trips to , , and .
Chinstrap Penguins, Baily Head, Antarctica.
But it was still just me, the lonely Street View Birder鈥攗ntil I took it to Facebook.
I created the Facebook group in early November and posted a link in the group, hoping some of those young, tech-savvy birders might want to join me in stalking Google Maps. I wasn鈥檛 prepared for the response.
In just a few weeks, more than 750 birders have signed up and are helping scroll the millions of Street View miles in search of birds. And we鈥檙e finding them. Where I was only able to manage a couple dozen of the easiest species鈥攍arge herons and gulls and Rock Pigeons鈥攖he community has together identified more than 580 different species, about 5 percent of all bird species on earth. All day long people are posting screenshots and links and debating the identifications of what they鈥檝e found.
The breadth of the searching and the communal detective work to identify birds from grainy images has been remarkable. We鈥檝e found more than 30 gull species, including that remarkable . We鈥檝e found in the Falklands, and on Midway. We鈥檝e spotted in Texas and both species of condor (and ). We鈥檝e found small birds, too, remarkably, including a on the Galapagos and a in Alaska. Each sighting includes a screenshot and link, so all members can assist with or review identifications.
Vermilion Flycatcher, Galapagos.
You might be clicking on those links and saying to yourself, 鈥渢hose tiny specks don鈥檛 look like anything!鈥 And, you鈥檙e right. But this is what鈥檚 great about Google Street View Birding: It鈥檚 a lot like real birding. All the time birders are poring over low-quality images and debating identifications between themselves. The Facebook group is no different, except there are lower stakes for us (we鈥檙e not submitting these to any gatekeeper Bird Records Committees, for example). It鈥檚 fun, it鈥檚 communal, and it鈥檚 exactly what the internet can be.
We鈥檙e taking new members all the time, but I鈥檇 like to give you some tips if you join to help you have a good experience.
- We鈥檙e primarily looking for new species, which is getting harder and harder as we find the more common ones. Once you鈥檙e in the group, you can consult a Google Spreadsheet to see what species we have and which we鈥檙e missing. There are also tabs on there for images of in Street View, other , and birds on or artwork
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Once you鈥檙e in, there are basically two ways you can Street View Bird.
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The first is to pick an area on Google Maps and just start exploring. Cruise around a landscape, paying particular attention to spots where birds pop up: on fences and power lines, along water edges, or soaring overhead. When you find a bird, use field guides or to help you make an identification.
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The second way is to seek out a specific species. Check the spreadsheet to find a bird that hasn鈥檛 been discovered yet, and use to figure out where they鈥檝e been seen. If there鈥檚 Google Street View imagery nearby, take a look around.
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If you find a new bird, congratulations! Screenshot your images and post it with a link in the Group. Then relish in the newfound glory of birding the world without leaving your office chair.
Nicholas Lund runs blog and writes column for 约炮视频. He lives in southern Maine and is the outreach and network manager for Maine 约炮视频.