First wild animal of 2018, outside my window this mourning:
Birds
1. Black-Capped Chickadee Poecile atricapillus
Birds
1. Black-Capped Chickadee Poecile atricapillus
And now, half an hour later, I have my second animal, also from outside my window:First wild animal of 2018, outside my window this mourning:
Birds
1. Black-Capped Chickadee Poecile atricapillus
That isn't a question which has come up before. I would say no.
Since this will be my first new year on Zoochat, I will participate this year. Today is Saturday in my part of the world, (a few more days to the New Year!), and got my lifer Rough-Legged Hawk today!
Here is a little bit about the classification systems I will be using:
Mammals - I don't know of any good mammal checklists, so I will be counting mammals the way I learned their taxonomy (except for some splits and lumps that I think make sents.)
Birds - I will be using Clemont's Checklist of Birds of the World (common names may vary a bit.)
Herptiles - Same as mammals.
Fish - Again same as mammals and herpitiles, but one question, Do species cough on hook and line count for the total?
Inverts - I can't ID them very well, but the few I can I will be counting.
Went birdwatching at several local nature preserves that are usually reliable. However, I didn't see as much as I hoped.And now, half an hour later, I have my second animal, also from outside my window:
Birds
2. American Crow Corvus brachyrhynchos
Kind of slow so far today, but I am going birdwatching soon, so I hope that will change.
I saw all of these species while diving in Bonaire in March.
I can remember them because my dive guide took photos of every species we saw.
Sorry, I think I got confused. Are you supposed to name species you saw in 2017 or intend to see in 2018? Or something else? Im new to the concept of Big Year posts.Either you have posted in the wrong thread and intended to post in the 2017 thread, or you are a time traveller from the futurewhich is it?
Ohhh, I see. Thank you.You are supposed to name species you *have* seen - so in this thread people are posting those few species they have seen in 2018 thus far, whilst in the 2017 thread they posted the species seen in that year.
Big-time mammal-watchers get most of their species by trapping. I personally don't trap mammals simply to see them (I'm just a small-time mammal-watcher). But yes they can count.An addition seen in a bathroom today:
Inverts
1. Long-Bodied Cellar Spider Pholcus phalangioides
Do species seen caught in a live trap count? Because if they do, I have one more mammal.
In that case...Big-time mammal-watchers get most of their species by trapping. I personally don't trap mammals simply to see them (I'm just a small-time mammal-watcher). But yes they can count.