The Institute for Bird Populations
The Institute for Bird Populations (IBP), based in Marin County, California, is a non-profit organization dedicated to studying and monitoring bird populations, and providing land managers and policy makers with information needed to better manage those populations.
Founded | 1989 |
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Founder | David F. DeSante |
Type | 501(c)(3) |
Focus | Bird monitoring and research, avian conservation science, bird-banding and monitoring training. |
Location |
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Area served | United States, Canada, Mexico, Central America, the Caribbean, South America. |
Key people | Executive Director: Rodney B. Siegel |
Website | www.birdpop.org |
History
The Institute was founded in 1989 by President Dr. David DeSante to develop and coordinate the Monitoring Avian Productivity and Survivorship Program (MAPS), a network of approximately 500 standardized bird banding stations studying breeding bird populations across North America.
In June 2015, the Institute launched a website, the Vital Rates of North American Landbirds, tracking the population of 150 bird species in North America, to raise awareness about the population declines of those species.[1]
Description
Scientists at the institute develop standardized bird monitoring techniques and tools for land managers and researchers studying bird populations, coordinate large-scale networks for monitoring vital rates of birds, conduct original research on the abundance, distribution, and ecology of birds, and convey their findings in scientific papers and reports to public and private land managers. The Institute also trains individuals, organizations, and agencies in the United States and abroad, in effective bird monitoring techniques.
Initiatives
- Monitoring Avian Productivity and Survivorship Program (MAPS)
- Monitoreo de Sobreviviencia Invernal Program (MoSI): a cooperative effort among agencies, organizations, and individual bird-banders in Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean to monitor overwintering survival rates of both Neotropical migratory and resident bird species
- Research and conservation efforts on behalf of birds in California's Sierra Nevada mountains (IBP's Sierra Nevada Bird Observatory)
- Development and deployment of bird monitoring programs on public lands
- Publication of Bird Populations, an online, peer-reviewed journal of global avian research
- 2015: Bird Genoscape Project, led by UCLA, first maps identifying the population-specific migration paths of several bird species to fix conservation priorities.[2]
- Creation and maintenance of a list of four- and six-letter abbreviations for North and Central American birds.
References
- William Hageman (24 June 2015). "Birds, birds and more birds". Chicagotribune.com. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
- Alison Hewitt (16 September 2015). "UCLA's Bird Genoscape Project to aid conservation efforts for North American birds threatened by climate change". Ucla.edu. Retrieved 14 May 2018.