Bird Journal

Developer’s Description

Bird Journal is a personal bird recording software application with a unique focus in terms of usability, features and quality. Enjoy using Bird Journal with its modern looks and intuitive design aimed at the beginner and experienced bird watcher alike. Improve your bird recording experience and keep your species counts up-to-date. There are exciting features built into Bird Journal for viewing entries, sightings, photographs, locations, birds, custom graphs. Bird Journal is able to manage large quantities of sightings and photographs with ease. Sightings are input using Bird Journal’s entry screen. An entry can be created for an outing or just casual sightings made at home or while traveling. Bird Journal is customizable too. You can choose whether or not to record counts per sighting, weather and photographs. Make your field trips/outings more memorable by recording as much or as little as you like.

Record anything

Enter bird & wildlife observations, photos, habitat and more with customisable data entry.

Bird Journal’s growing library contains hundreds of checklists and taxonomies, with over 100,000 species and subspecies worldwide.

Explore your records

Enjoy looking back through your data with beautiful reports, lists, graphs, maps & photos.

Search instantly by date, species, location & more.

Share your records

Export or print records and species lists for use anywhere.

eBird and BirdTrack systems are fully supported, so you can do your bit for science and conservation.

Access anywhere

Access and enter your records from all of the devices you use with apps for Mac, Windows, iOS, Android & the Web.

Data is stored on each device, meaning you always have access even when on the move, in the field or abroad.

Remember forever

Never lose your data. Everything added to Bird Journal is safely and securely stored in Bird Journal’s cloud.

If you lose your device or your computer malfunctions, simply sign back in to your account to carry on from where you left off.

Bring your data

Get started quickly by importing existing records from any other system or application.

eBird, BirdTrack & Wildlife Recorder records can be imported directly.

Birds

Birds is an international, peer-reviewed, open access journal on ornithology published quarterly online by MDPI.

  • Open Access—Content may be downloaded, shared, and reused freely. Authors receive recognition for their contribution when the paper is reused.
  • Rapid Publication: manuscripts are peer-reviewed and a first decision provided to authors approximately 22 days after submission; acceptance to publication is undertaken in 3.6 days (median values for papers published in this journal in the second half of 2021).
  • Recognition of Reviewers: Reviewers who provide timely, thorough peer-review reports receive vouchers entitling them to a discount on the APC of their next publication in any MDPI journal. While single-blind peer review is standard, reviewers have the option available for signed peer review, and reviewer names are published annually in the journal.
  • Benefits of Publishing: Our ambition is to achieve an impact factor in the range of 1.5-2.5.
    Birds aims to be one of the leading ornithology journal, we therefore aim, by 2025, to be in the top 10 ornithology journals listed in the Journal Citation Report (JCR).
  • Birds is a companion journal of Animals.
  • In recent times, there has been an unprecedented increase in usage of electrical lightning. This has led to increase in artificial light at night (ALAN), and it has been suggested as a source of environmental pollution. ALAN exposure has been reported to be […] Read more.
    (This article belongs to the Special Issue
  • In recent times, there has been an unprecedented increase in usage of electrical lightning. This has led to increase in artificial light at night (ALAN), and it has been suggested as a source of environmental pollution. ALAN exposure has been reported to be […] Read more.
    (This article belongs to the Special Issue
  • Bird Journal is the best way to record, explore and share your bird & wildlife observations and experiences. It has thousands of users across the world and works on a variety of devices.

    Start keeping a record of your bird & wildlife observations now with a free account.

    RECORD ANYTHING
    Enter bird & wildlife observations, photos*, habitat and more with customisable data entry. Bird Journal’s growing library contains hundreds of checklists and taxonomies, with over 100,000 species and subspecies worldwide.

    EXPLORE YOUR RECORDS
    Enjoy looking back through your data with beautiful entry reports, species lists, graphs**, maps**, reports** & photos. Search instantly by date, species, location & more.

    SHARE YOUR RECORDS
    Export or print records and species lists for use anywhere*. eBird and BirdTrack systems are fully supported, so you can conveniently contribute to conservation efforts*.

    ACCESS ANYWHERE
    Access and enter your records on any supported device or computer. Data is stored on each device, meaning you always have access even when on the move, in the field or abroad.

    REMEMBER FOREVER
    Never lose your data. Everything added to Bird Journal is safely and securely stored in Bird Journal’s cloud. If you lose your device or your computer malfunctions, simply sign back in to your account to carry on from where you left off.

    BRING YOUR DATA
    Get started quickly by importing existing records from any other system or app*. eBird, BirdTrack & Wildlife Recorder records can be imported directly.

    * Requires the free desktop version of Bird Journal.
    ** Requires an upgrade to a Bird Journal Premium account.

    In the era of eBird, it’s easy to log your bird sightings into the ether, but what if seeing birds conjures more creative initiative in you than an online tally? What if writing or drawing what you see is part of your birding practice?

     

    I tossed the question out to my birding friends recently and got back a reassuring–tho’ admittedly unscientific–60 percent “Yes!” of the twelve or so people who responded. “Yes!” to scribbling down birds seen from the yard, during a trip, either as part of an existing journal or separately in a notebook for a birding life list.

     

    “I’ve kept a life list journal since I started birding and still use it, though for everyday birding and nature observations I use a small Moleskine® journal,” says Lauren Braden, founder of the travel website Northwest Trip Finder (where she shares birding tips). “I treasure my notes, especially those from the days when I first started birding,” she says.

     

    Adam Sedgely, Director of Web Strategy for Conservation International (and former Seattle Audubon staff member) has stacks of Rite in the Rain® notebooks, his choice for documenting his 20-plus years of birding travel. “The content runs the gamut: fun phrases to remember, places to visit, notes (on photos) I’ve taken and, of course, species lists — using the four-letter bird band codes,” he says. “Though (the codes), mixed with my handwriting, means the lists are discernible to only a handful of people in the world!”

     

    For some, a journal is more than a place to write. Wildlife artist Liz Clayton Fuller uses a Moleskine® watercolor journal to sketch and note what she sees in the field. “The combination of sketching, painting, and note-taking leaves me with a holistic view of what happened that day,” she says. “When I look back through my sketchbook I’m transported back to the moments of that day.” Such documenting of a personal experience is incalculably valuable to obsessive chroniclers like birders.

     

    Contents SO valuable, some are willing to risk bodily harm for a journal’s recovery. “I technically pulled a knife on some teenagers in Barcelona who’d pickpocketed my notebook,” says Sedgely. “I had my yellow Rite in the Rain® notebook in my back pocket.” After getting hip checked by them, he realized his journal was gone.

     

    “I approached them–smile on my face–but unclipped my pocket knife and held on to it to prevent its theft as I approached the group. Before I could open my mouth, I heard someone in the group, who’d seen my stealth maneuver, yell, ‘he’s got a knife!’” Sedgely says the next few seconds were a blur, but in the chaos of the moment the yellow journal suddenly appeared above him, and he grabbed it.

     

    However you choose to count your birds (and your luck, in Sedgely’s case), consider what kind of journal will best suit your practice. Below are five journals–including one for kids–that range in style, content, purpose and size, for any birder wanting an analog catalog of their birding experience.

     

    BirdNote Journal: A Birdwatcher’s Companion from the Popular Public Radio Show

    Brand new on the market (released this month by local publisher Sasquatch) the BirdNote journal is the only one among the selection here to contain tips and strategies for better birding. It also contains elegant illustrations by Emily Poole, who illustrated the companion BirdNote book and notecards. The journal is a “bird log” for listing whatever you see, with extra pages for sketching, and essays for inspiration interspersed throughout. Ideal for a beginner or casual birder who is confident of common birds (or doesn’t mind carrying a field guide in addition to this journal), and likes a pretty package to write more than just the birds seen. Purchase online or at the Seattle Audubon Nature Shop.

    Rite in the Rain® All Weather Birders Journal

    This distinct slim spiral bound journal with its yellow cover is ideal for Pacific Northwest birding in real time rain and damp in the field. Low on embellishment (except for the American Birding Association (ABA) Birding Ethics and a summary of bird body terms in the inside covers) the pages contain date, location and weather cells, but are otherwise blank. The journal has no checklist so is meant to be used until filled, versus as a life list journal. Purchase online or at the Seattle Audubon Nature Shop.

    Sibley Birder’s Life List and Field Diary

    Reputedly the “serious birder’s journal,” David Allen Sibley’s namesake journal does set a standard for certain format: Spiral bound to lay flat for use in the field, it’s meant to be a life-long birding journal, with a check list of North American species as well as pages for individual birds and the details surrounding your seeing them (weather, time, location, etc). Alongside the species pages is space to free write, but there is no accompanying “how to” text or artwork (lost opportunity!) to inspire this journal as something other than data collection. Purchase online or at the Seattle Audubon Nature Shop.

    Birder’s Lifelist and Journal by Cornell

    For those serious birders who like artwork with their data collection and prefer flexibound to spiral, Cornell’s birding journal is very similar in format to Sibley’s. Purchase online or at the Seattle Audubon Nature Shop.

    Bird Brainiacs Activity Journal and Log Book for Young Birders (ages 8 and up)

    Another Cornell publication and one that as an adult I would love using! Printed on sturdy (and bird friendly) Forest Stewardship Council paper and spiral bound for easy use, the first half of the book asks questions to induce birding fervor in a kid, with prompts like, “Which bird would you rather be?” and “How well do you know your state for birds?” The activities stay within the book itself (not requiring other supplies) as the book is intended as collection of bird inspired memories. To that end, the second half of the book is the birding log, with the usual weather/location/time details, along with step-by-step “how to draw” instructions accompanied with a page to try. Cornell’s book trains a child’s eye to bird, then inspires them to get out and document it, all in a beautiful package. Purchase online or at the Seattle Audubon Nature Shop.

    The Birding Passport by Letterfolk makes a great gift for the budding birder in your life, or perhaps you want to start your own nature journal and need a little motivation.

    The Bird Passport contains 20 entry logs to record details of your birding adventures.

    Each entry page is accompanied by a blank page for thoughts, drawings, or photos. The back pages of the Book Passport include bucket lists, maps, and checklists.

     

How To Install?

Run the system and open PC properties.
Get the latest Software.
Go to the activation menu too.
After that, download the code and the crack from the link below.
Enter this key to activate.

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