The record is on the bird capture data from the Robson Creek Site in 2011. Data set contains information related to the bird capture details such as, the Australian Bird & Bat Banding Scheme (ABBBS) band number, field species identification, the Royal Australasian Ornithologists Union (RAOU) Species Number, age and sex of the bird. There are details of morphometric measurements such as weight, bill length, tarsus length, wing length, wing moult and tail moult. In addition information on re-capture, breeding status and blood collection details have been recorded.
Credit
We at TERN acknowledge the Traditional Owners and Custodians throughout Australia, New Zealand and all nations. We honour their profound connections to land, water, biodiversity and culture and pay our respects to their Elders past, present and emerging.
Purpose
The aim of the bird surveys at Robson Creek are to provide a description of the bird community, including its richness and composition, and having established a baseline description to monitor the dynamics and phenology of the community over time. The aim is to be able to link this data to environmental drivers of dynamics.
Ideally the monitoring could also be used as means of estimating and monitoring abundance of individual species. Unfortunately, most if not all species at the site can move rapidly between transects and within transects. This means that the survey transects are not independent of each other and it cannot be assumed that the observations of individual birds or groups of birds encountered are independent of each other on a transect or even at a point on a transect. Given that that most detections are by ear and not by eye means there is no guarantee that new detections at a point are not simply a bird moving.
Bird surveys at Robson Creek are conducted using walked transects and are largely in line with the Transect Method used in the Birdlife Australia Atlas Project.
Lineage
Surveys were conducted monthly at a minimum but usually fortnightly. They are conducted in all weather conditions except those which would seriously impact detection ability, i.e. during very heavy rain or wind. Should heavy rain or wind occur after the commencement of a survey the survey is paused until those conditions end. If this seems unlikely the survey is abandoned until a later date.
Where ever possible surveys are conducted by the same two observer, though over time this, inevitably, cannot always be achieved.
Surveys begun between 0600 and 0800 with later start times occurring in the cooler months when days are shorter. Survey duration was two and a half to three hours. Observers walk five set sections of trail on and around the Robson Creek plot. They moved at such a pace that they spend a minimum of, and as close as possible, to 30 minutes on each section. With each survey the observer records: Date, Time, Weather, Observer.
Encounters with birds were either visual or aural. At each encounter the following data is collected: species, number of individuals, whether the bird was seen or heard, sex (if possible), age (if possible), time since start of the survey.
Where ever possible surveys are conducted by the same two observer, though over time this, inevitably, cannot always be achieved.
Surveys begun between 0600 and 0800 with later start times occurring in the cooler months when days are shorter. Survey duration was two and a half to three hours. Observers walk five set sections of trail on and around the Robson Creek plot. They moved at such a pace that they spend a minimum of, and as close as possible, to 30 minutes on each section. With each survey the observer records: Date, Time, Weather, Observer.
Encounters with birds were either visual or aural. At each encounter the following data is collected: species, number of individuals, whether the bird was seen or heard, sex (if possible), age (if possible), time since start of the survey.