[mou] promoting harmony?
Jeff Price
jtpbirder@yahoo.com
Mon, 23 Feb 2004 09:59:07 -0800 (PST)
Randy,
>From a scientific point of view your idea is
relatively sound for some species but not others. So,
for questions dealing with summer status (King Rail,
Northern Bobwhite) then this approach, if it were
coupled with some sort of atlas block-busting effort,
might yield desired results.
For other species that may be more irregular
(winter/migrants) then it would likely require more
than two years. For others, like Gyrfalcon, it might
work or it might not depending on the actual status in
winter. Then again, it might tell you something about
the actual status of the species in winter....
Jeff Price
--- fredericksonr@willmar.k12.mn.us wrote:
> Birding Friends-
>
> One of the primary reasons we have such great
> dissent regarding rare bird
> designations is that we are lacking in hard science.
> So what if the MOU
> designated one species a year or so as a target bird
> by the entire
> organization? (Perhaps one year is not sufficient
> data but that could
> easily be modified).
> One of our two publications could provide us
=====
Jeff Price
Boulder, CO
jtpbirder@yahoo.com
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