Birdathon 4+

A birding checklist app

Barry Langdon-Lassagne

Designed for iPad

    • 4.7 • 12 Ratings
    • Free
    • Offers In-App Purchases

Screenshots

Description

Birdathon is a tool for recording your bird observations, organizing your bird checklists and sharing your birding adventures with others. Use Birdathon in the field to quickly record whether a bird is seen or heard and the number observed. The time and location of each observation is automatically recorded. You can adjust the location, time entries and the count of birds observed at any time to ensure your records are accurate.

Checklist maps display the locations of your observations. You can overlay county boundaries for every US state. You can add a range circle such as a 5MR (5-mile Radius) to your maps. You can import and overlay custom kml files onto your maps.

Your checklists can be viewed in taxonomic order, alphabetically, by rarity or as a timeline of birds in the order observed. You can enrich your checklist with field notes and add observations such as mammals, butterflies, wildflowers, etc., to make it into a rich record of your experience. You can organize your checklists into categories such as Day List, Year List, County List, Life List, etc., and assign color themes to your lists.

Bird species may be added and deleted from your lists at any time. You can create new checklist templates from your previous lists or import templates created by others. You can change which template is being used. You can import text files into Birdathon, making them into templates or new checklists.

Different export options for your checklists let you import into eBird or into another copy of Birdathon.

A Summary view aggregates bird observations from all your checklists across different time spans (week, month, year, etc.) and geographic locations, sorting the information in various ways. Summary maps and lists can be restricted to a specific geographic range. You can export Summary data into a csv text file or create a new checklist template from the Summary.

The bird species source data and other resources used in this app come from the following sources:

AOS Checklist derived from the American Ornithological Society's Checklist of North and Middle American Birds. http://checklist.aou.org. Used with permission.

ABA Checklist derived from the American Birding Association's checklist of North American Birds. http://listing.aba.org/aba-checklist/. Used with permission.

Santa Clara County Checklist derived from the Santa Clara Valley Audubon Society's Santa Clara County, California Bird Lists, maintained by Brooke Miller. https://scvas.org/sc-county-birds. Used with permission.

World bird family names and world birds come from the Clements Checklist, from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology’s eBird/Clements checklist of birds of the world. https://www.birds.cornell.edu/clementschecklist/download/. Used with permission.

Alpha codes come from The Institute for Bird Populations’ Standardized 4- and 6-letter Bird Species Codes. https://www.birdpop.org/pages/birdSpeciesCodes.php.

County boundary data is from the United States Geological Survey (USGS) TIGER/Line 2019 Shapefiles found on the United States Census Bureau's website at https://www.census.gov/geographies/mapping-files/time-series/geo/tiger-line-file.2019.html. Boundaries should be used as general guidelines and not be considered precise. Note especially where county boundaries follow creeks, rivers, ridge lines and other natural features, and so are of much finer resolution than can be shown on Birdathon’s maps.

App Preview music "Carefree" by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com). Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

What’s New

Version 1.5.2

A few bug fixes for this release:
• The Clements Checklist of birds of the world was missing the following birds: Common Buzzard, Eastern Shrike-tit, Western Shrike-tit, Northern Shrike-tit, Olive-backed Forest Robin
• If you have a checklist with a bird whose common name changed in the latest Clements Checklist, Birdathon now does a better job of assigning those birds to the correct family. Previously most would show up as "Uncategorized" when sorting by Taxonomic order (Family). Some birds (such as species that were split) could not be categorized, so they may still appear as "Uncategorized." In those cases, you will need to determine the new common name
• You can now import bird lists that were saved from the Summary. The Summary only exports some of the information, so the new checklist created will only have that information

Happy birding!

Ratings and Reviews

4.7 out of 5
12 Ratings

12 Ratings

6kathyl4 ,

Great app for our bird list

We love this app and use it to log as we go the birds we see in our yard and on many of our outing. We also Like the the location marking and have shared lists with birding friends from time to time. We use in combo with ebird when we need help to narrow down a species to our location. We have made some suggestions to improve the text searching by ignoring spaces or hyphens which the author is hoping to implement. Thanks for a great app.

Downloaded and used the recent update. Love the improved search capabilities. Thanks for including this feature in your update.

Developer Response ,

Take a look at version 1.5, which just dropped today! Among other changes, it incorporates your excellent suggestions: searches in a checklist now work even if you don't type the hyphens or apostrophes and extra spaces are ignored. Let me know how it works for you!

CoachCC1000 ,

Best mobile field birding app. No contest.

There is so much to love about this app! I have used it daily for over two years. County list, location list, day list. You can name any list you want. I have site lists. I have challenge lists.
In the field it provides accurate sighting information associated with a real time map.
You can pinpoint nest sites. You can pinpoint hawk’s hunting fields. And you can do this while moving.
At the end of a long day, your app will still leave the battery functioning. Can’t do that with ebird.
You can generate first sighting records. Last sighting records. Week by week. Monthly.
If I could ‘fix’ a site for printing summary reports the app would rival the legendary Avisys.
Thanks so much for the wonderful app. And good birding.

pnjwood ,

Everything I need

I keep my birding observations in ebird for the science value, but this app allows me to keep much more information for my own journal. I like to keep track of new plants, interesting insects and animals. Export to ebird is very easy, so I can still contribute my sighting data. And export to email is useful to copy the full report into my journal, which is backed up and available in my desktop. Highly recommended.

UPDATE: Export to email is not completely polished. I hope to be able to copy the report to my journal soon. A direct share would be most useful.

App Privacy

The developer, Barry Langdon-Lassagne, indicated that the app’s privacy practices may include handling of data as described below. For more information, see the developer’s privacy policy.

Data Not Collected

The developer does not collect any data from this app.

Privacy practices may vary, for example, based on the features you use or your age. Learn More

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