INVERTSBIRDS
204 - Crescent Honeyeater Phylidonyris pyrrhopterus
205 - Grey Currawong Strepera versicolor
FISHES
148 - Southern Hulafish Trachinops caudimaculatus
104 - Eight-armed Seastar Meridiastra calcar
INVERTSBIRDS
204 - Crescent Honeyeater Phylidonyris pyrrhopterus
205 - Grey Currawong Strepera versicolor
FISHES
148 - Southern Hulafish Trachinops caudimaculatus
@Dr. Wolverine – I have no idea what your bird total is. You numbered them up to 18, then your next bird was numbered as 13 and you continued from that point up to 91, then you relisted them up to 109 but the birds didn’t fully match, and you continued from 109 to 118, then went down to 114, continued from that number to 192, then used number 192 again, and then continued from there to 228. You’ll need to do a complete re-list.
Your mammal total is also wrong – you used number 14 twice so I think your latest total should be 18 not 17, but you’ll need to check.
I've rechecked my birds, the missing numbers 54-64 and 109 had simply not been posted here (my primary yearlist is on a discord server, from which I copy to Zoochat, so I may occasionally forget to list some things here!!).@DaLilFishie – your bird total is also way out. You were on 53 but then jumped straight to 65, continued from there to 108 but then jumped to 110 (skipping 109), continued on to 152, used the number 152 twice, and then continued from there. Your listed total is 205 which must be about 12 birds too high.
Your fish total also seems to be wrong – you jumped from 120 to 122 (skipping 121), and later you mentioned you would be removing #133 from the list as an unsure ID but your numbering continued without a break.
June 6-21, 2025
Birds
54. Barn Swallow (Hirundo rustica)
55. Northern Rough-Winged Swallow (Stelgidopteryx serripennis)
56. Red-Headed Woodpecker (Melanerpes erythrocephalus)
57. Black Vulture (Coragyps atratus)
Reptiles
4. Common Wall Lizard (Podarcis muralis)
Invertebrates
5. Non-Biting Midge (couldn’t determine a species)
6. Emergent Mayfly (Hexagenia bilineata)
7. Eastern Tiger Swallowtail (Papilio glaucus)
Totals
Birds: 57
Mammals: 9
Invertebrates: 7
Fish: 5
Reptiles: 4
Amphibians: 2
Total: 84
I have gone through all the year’s posts, the tallies so far will be provided below.
However, these people will need to go through their lists and sort out some issues:
@Prochilodus246 – you have skipped at least two numbers in your bird lists – numbers 93 and 101 are missing from your posts, so your total is at least two birds too high. And in your invertebrate listings you had at least two numbers repeated (6 and 8), so the total for those is probably two numbers too low.
121 I had simply forgotten to post here (Ward's Damsel, Pomacentrus wardi), and I've adjusted the numbers to accommodate removal of Pacific Redfin Pseudaspius brandtii.@DaLilFishie – your bird total is also way out. You were on 53 but then jumped straight to 65, continued from there to 108 but then jumped to 110 (skipping 109), continued on to 152, used the number 152 twice, and then continued from there. Your listed total is 205 which must be about 12 birds too high.
Your fish total also seems to be wrong – you jumped from 120 to 122 (skipping 121), and later you mentioned you would be removing #133 from the list as an unsure ID but your numbering continued without a break.
Day trip to Bruny Island to look for the Forty-spotted Pardalote - no luck with that species, but got two other lifers so can't complain too much!I've rechecked my birds, the missing numbers 54-64 and 109 had simply not been posted here (my primary yearlist is on a discord server, from which I copy to Zoochat, so I may occasionally forget to list some things here!!).
I did use the number 152 twice, but I realised I'd also counted Little Friarbird twice, so the numbers of some species has changed but the total has not.
Here is the corrected list:
BIRDS
1 - Australasian Figbird
2 - House Sparrow
3 - Torresian Imperial-Pigeon
4 - Pacific Black Duck
5 - Rock Dove
6 - Magpie-lark
7 - White-breasted Cuckooshrike
8 - Common Myna
9 - Peaceful Dove
10 - White-breasted Woodswallow
11 - Silver Gull
12 - Bar-tailed Godwit
13 - Whimbrel
14 - Little Egret
15 - Rainbow Lorikeet
16 - Australian Pelican
17 - Welcome Swallow
18 - Masked Lapwing
19 - Eastern Great Egret
20 - Far Eastern Curlew
21 - Willie-wagtail
22 - Bush Stone-curlew
23 - Eastern Reef-Heron
24 - Varied Honeyeater
25 - Rainbow Bee-eater
26 - Great Crested Tern
27 - Black Noddy
28 - Brown Noddy
29 - Black-naped Tern
30 - Sooty Tern
31 - Buff-banded Rail
32 - Ashy-bellied White-eye
33 - Rose-crowned Fruit-Dove
34 - Orange-footed Scrubfowl
35 - Great Frigatebird
36 - Common Greenshank
37 - Sacred Kingfisher
38 - Great Knot
39 - Metallic Starling
40 - Sahul Sunbird
41 - Black Butcherbird
42 - Hornbill Friarbird
43 - Papuan Frogmouth
44 - Pacific Baza
45 - Australian Brush Turkey
46 - Plumed Whistling-Duck
47 - Pacific Heron
48 - Whistling Kite
49 - Forest Kingfisher
50 - Brown-backed Honeyeater
51 - Black Kite
52 - Australian Magpie
53 - Chinese Pond Heron
0 - Australian Reed-warbler (heard)
54 - Yellow Honeyeater
55 - Australasian Swiftlet
56 - Royal Spoonbill
57 - Terek Sandpiper
58 - Bar-shouldered Dove
59 - Spangled Drongo
60 - Spotted Dove
0 - Torresian Kingfisher (heard)
61 - Australian Pied Oystercatcher
62 - Nankeen Night-Heron
63 - Magpie Goose
64 - Australasian Swamphen
65 - Sulphur-crested Cockatoo
66 - Little Pied Cormorant
67 - Striated Heron
68 - Little Black Cormorant
69 - Helmeted Guineafowl
70 - Golden-headed Cisticola
71 - Eastern Yellow Wagtail
72 - Australasian Pipit
0 - Greylag Goose (domestic)
73 - Grey-tailed Tattler
74 - Red-necked Stint
75 - Nordmann's Greenshank
76 - White-faced Heron
77 - Pied Stilt
78 - Straw-necked Ibis
79 - Crimson Finch
80 - Eurasian Wigeon
81 - Eastern Spot-billed Duck
82 - Mallard
83 - Eurasian Teal
84 - Eurasian Coot
85 - Grey Heron
86 - Carrion Crow
87 - Large-billed Crow
88 - Brown-eared Bulbul
89 - Warbling White-eye
90 - White-cheeked Starling
91 - Eurasian Tree Sparrow
92 - Japanese Wagtail
93 - White Wagtail
94 - Japanese Pygmy Woodpecker
95 - Long-tailed Tit
96 - Black-headed Gull
97 - Grey Wagtail
98 - Oriental Turtle Dove
99 - Common Merganser
100 - Common Shelduck
101 - Great Cormorant
102 - Little Grebe
103 - Dusky Thrush
104 - Asian House Martin
105 - Daurian Redstart
106 - Blue Rock-thrush
107 - Eurasian Jay
108 - Asian Tit
109 - Varied Tit
110 - Japanese Woodpecker
111 - Barn Swallow
112 - Brown Dipper
113 - Meadow Bunting
114 - Oriental Greenfinch
115 - Bull-headed Shrike
116 - Brown-headed Thrush
117 - Azure-winged Magpie
118 - Greater Scaup
119 - Common Pochard
120 - Black-tailed Gull
121 - Black-faced Spoonbill
122 - Northern Shoveler
124 - Tufted Duck
126 - Mute Swan
126 - Japanese Green Pheasant
127 - Eastern Buzzard
128 - Brambling
129 - Mandarin Duck
130 - Gadwall
131 - Little Friarbird
132 - Blue-faced Honeyeater
133 - Red-browed Finch
134 - Lewin's Honeyeater
135 - Great Crested Grebe
136 - Black Swan
137 - Hardhead
138 - Silvereye
139 - Brown Gerygone
140 - Yellow-faced Honeyeater
141 - Yellow-breasted Boatbill
142 - Eastern Yellow Robin
143 - Spectacled Monarch
144 - Rufous Shrikethrush
145 - Victoria's Riflebird
146 - Chestnut-breasted Mannikin
147 - Wandering Whistling-Duck
148 - Coal Tit
149 - Black-fronted Dotterel
150 - Laughing Kookaburra
151 - Red-backed Fairywren
152 - Channel-billed Cuckoo
153 - Green Oriole
154 - Varied Triller
155 - Rufous Whistler
156 - Double-eyed Fig-Parrot
157 - Superb Fruit-Dove
158 - Osprey
159 - Vega Gull
160 - Masked Bunting
161 - Japanese Cormorant
162 - Galah
163 - Great Bowerbird
164 - White-chinned Honeyeater
165 - Black-faced Cuckooshrike
166 - Olive-backed Oriole
167 - Double-barred Finch
168 - Red-tailed Black Cockatoo
169 - White-gaped Honeyeater
170 - Pied Currawong
171 - Torresian Crow
172 - Eastern Cattle Egret
173 - Southern Cassowary
174 - Superb Fairywren
175 - Yellow Wattlebird
176 - New Holland Honeyeater
177 - Common Blackbird
178 - Brown Thornbill
179 - Tasmanian Native-hen
180 - European Starling
181 - Australian Little Penguin
182 - Little Wattlebird
183 - Forest Raven
184 - Black-faced Cormorant
185 - Grey Fantail
186 - Chestnut Teal
187 - Green Rosella
188 - Australian Shelduck
189 - Kelp Gull
190 - Pacific Gull
191 - Sooty Oystercatcher
192 - Australasian Gannet
193 - Swamp Harrier
194 - Wedge-tailed Eagle
195 - Yellow-tailed Black-Cockatoo
196 - Scarlet Robin
197 - Black Currawong
198 - Strong-billed Honeyeater
199 - Grey Shrikethrush
200 - Musk Duck
201 - Noisy Miner
202 - Australasian Shoveler
203 - Australian Wood Duck
204 - Crescent Honeyeater
205 - Grey Currawong
I'll recount the fishes tomorrow.
Last couple of days:
Mammals
11. Smooth coated otter, Lutrogale perspicillata
12. Lesser short nosed fruit bat, Cyanopterus brachyotis
Birds
112. Asian openbill, Anastomus oscitans
113. Great billed heron, Ardea sumatrana
114. Great egret, Ardea alba
115. Intermediate egret, Ardea intermedia
116. Little egret, Egretta garzetta
117. Brahminy kite, Haliastur indus
118. Oriental pied hornbill, Anthracoceros albirostris
119. Collared kingfisher, Todiramphus chloris
120. Common flameback. Dinopium javanense
121. Laced woodpecker, Picus vittatus
122. Greater racket tailed drongo, Dicrurus paradiseus
123. White breasted waterhen, Amaurornis phoenicurus
124. Common tailorbird, Orthotomus sutorius
125. Dark necked tailorbird, Orthotomus atrogularis
126. Pacific swallow, Hirundo tahitica
127. White headed munia, Lonchura maja
Thanks. Looked through these again and yes - 265 birds is correct. My mammal total is 24.I have gone through all the year’s posts, the tallies so far will be provided below.
However, these people will need to go through their lists and sort out some issues:
@birdsandbats – your bird total is about ten birds too high: you had made a typo and followed #142 with #153 and then just continued on from that number (i.e. your numbering went 142, 153, 154, 155, and so on). In a couple of places you removed birds as well, so I’m not sure what your actual total is but it must be about 265 rather than 275.
Your mammals are also wrongly totalled but in the opposite direction – you were on 8 mammals but then numbered your next mammal as 7, then had 8 again, then continued on from that point. I think that means your are two ahead of your listed total (23) but you’ll need to recalculate.
@DaLilFishie – your bird total is also way out. You were on 53 but then jumped straight to 65, continued from there to 108 but then jumped to 110 (skipping 109), continued on to 152, used the number 152 twice, and then continued from there. Your listed total is 205 which must be about 12 birds too high.
Your fish total also seems to be wrong – you jumped from 120 to 122 (skipping 121), and later you mentioned you would be removing #133 from the list as an unsure ID but your numbering continued without a break.
@Dr. Wolverine – I have no idea what your bird total is. You numbered them up to 18, then your next bird was numbered as 13 and you continued from that point up to 91, then you relisted them up to 109 but the birds didn’t fully match, and you continued from 109 to 118, then went down to 114, continued from that number to 192, then used number 192 again, and then continued from there to 228. You’ll need to do a complete re-list.
Your mammal total is also wrong – you used number 14 twice so I think your latest total should be 18 not 17, but you’ll need to check.
@Prochilodus246 – you have skipped at least two numbers in your bird lists – numbers 93 and 101 are missing from your posts, so your total is at least two birds too high. And in your invertebrate listings you had at least two numbers repeated (6 and 8), so the total for those is probably two numbers too low.
@MRJ – your reptile total must be two higher (21?) – you used both 18 and 19 twice.
@Enzo – your bird total is one too high – you jumped from 37 to 39 (skipping 38).
@MOG2012 – you used number 62 twice in your bird lists, and number 24 twice in your invertebrate lists, so you’ll need to check those.
Forgot this from a few days ago. On the plane leaving Tasmania as I type this.Day trip to Bruny Island to look for the Forty-spotted Pardalote - no luck with that species, but got two other lifers so can't complain too much!
MAMMALS
14 - Red-necked (Bennett's) Wallaby Notamacropus rufogriseus
BIRDS
206 - Yellow-throated Honeyeater Lichenostomus flavicollis
207 - Spotted Pardalote Pardalotus punctatus
208 - Black-headed Honeyeater Melithreptus affinis
209 - Australian Golden Whistler Pachycephala pectoralis
210 - Hooded Plover Thinornis cucullatus
Mammals - 14
Birds - 210
Herps - 17
Fishes - 147
Inverts - 104
05.07.25 - Allrode, Saxony-Anhalt, Germany09.06.25 - Altopiano de Montasio (100, 101), Italy; Trenta Upper Valley (144), Slovenia
Mammals
100. Alpine Marmot (Marmota marmota)
101. Alpine Ibex (Capra ibex)
Birds (passerines)
144. Western Bonelli's Warbler (Phylloscopus bonelli)
I just realised I counted Little Corella twice, so with today’s new bird I am on 121.Birds
121. Striated Thornbill (Acanthiza lineata)
Been putting off writing this update for way to long, I started writing super long but eventually I had written so long across so much time that I forgot some of my experiences and the writing was beginning to be to much to read when I included every new bird, although I still will feature my highlights from this migration season. It begins right after my last update when I went to Cape May County to go birding for 2 consecutive weekends. The first trip was relatively uneventful on the bird front, picking up typical migrates and of course the South Jersey Carolina Chickadee, however I finally got views of wild Atlantic Bottlenose Dolphins swimming off the coast along with 2 species of Snake: Eastern Rat Snake and the Black Racer. One the way back however, a stop at Edwin B. Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge proved to be quite successful, picking a pretty uncommon Merlin along with a lifer Seaside Sparrow, a bird I had only heard last year. The next day I went to Garret Mountain where I had an amazing day of birding, rounding off a majority of common spring migrants in what was by far my most successful birding outing to date, seeing 63 species of birds, beating my old record by 12. Among the birds was a lifer buzzing Blue-Winged Warbler and an overdue Rose-Breasted Grosbeak. I continued to pick up migrants throughout the week including another overdue bird in the Wood Thrush, and a colony of Cliff Swallows just 5 minutes from my house that I had completely missed last year. That weekend I was back down in Cape May where my first stop was Belleplain State Forest, which I had previously visited before birding. Despite my checklists there being small, the new habitat provided for several new birds including the abundant Yellow-Throated Warbler, a distant yet easily noticeable Summer Tanager, a shy Hooded Warbler, and a White-Eyed Vireo high in the trees. The next day I traveled to Cape May proper where I had a successful sea watch, getting a lifer Parasitic Jaeger, along with a lifer Yellow-Breasted Chat in the meadows. The chat somehow wasn’t even the coolest thing I saw in the Cape May Meadows as when crossing a bridge, and North American River Otter poked its head out of the water to look a me, a mammal I had long been searching for. A couple stops along the way home lead to several herons and shorebirds being added to me list including a White-Faced Ibis in Manahawkin that I was barely able to make out in the pouring rain. After another week of local birding I tried out a new place in the Meadowlands- Losen Slote Creek Park. I wish I knew about that place sooner because birds were singing in every direction, including Bay-Breasted Warbler and Cape May Warbler, both of which I missed last year, didn’t even hear (the Bay-Breasted Warbler I would see a lot of for the next 2 weeks.) The next weekend I went up to Sterling Forest in New York in search of the Golden-Winged Warbler. Of course this is the year that didn’t produced any records (there was a Brewster’s Warbler, although I can’t county hybrids), but I did walk out with a lifer Cerulean Warbler and about 20 ticks on me. The next day I went back to Losen Slote Creek Park due to reports of a long-staying Bicknell’s Thrush. After a walk around the park, we heard it when we got back near the entrance, and after about 10 minutes of hearing it, we saw the Bicknell’s Thrush being some thick foliage. For Memorial Day Weekend I went back down the shore, closer to Ocean City, although I did get a chance to see an Acadian Flycatcher in Belleplain, a bird I missed last time. A trip to the beach gave me a shock Royal Tern flyover, a bird I went to Sandy Hook to see and miss during their peak migration last year. That night I took a trip down to the salt marshes of the southern NJ coast where I was able to see a long-staying American Barn Owl as it flew over its marsh. Before leaving, I stopped a small park near where I was staying where I finally got looks of a Prothonotary Warbler, a bird I had been seeking since I first went down the shore last year. Not only that but I saw a group of 3 rare lingering Bay-Breasted Warblers in some tall trees. June didn’t have much birding in it due to a mix of the strong heat waves late in the month, 2 flat tires, and my dog sadly getting sick, although at the beginning of the month I was quite shocked to see a Yellow-Bellied Flycatcher during a short trip to Garret Mountain along with a trip to West Jersey late in the month to see a Swainson’s Warbler. While I went on the one day the warbler was no-show, I spotted a Bobcat along the backroads of west Jersey along with a small Common Gallinule at a stop up in Wallkill River NWR on the way back. Over the next month I’ll be taking 2 trips (unfortunately missing the opening of the World of Darkness at the Bronx Zoo) the first an annual family trip to the Andirondacks, and the second, a 3 and a half week trip across the southern US where I will visit some schools, zoos, and parks, where I hope to see animals like Red-Cockaded Woodpecker, American Alligator, Bachman’s Sparrow, and Elk.This update begins as I traveled to Sandy Hook to try and see some of the last ocean birds I need for the year, along with some possible Thrashers and Towhees. It wasn’t long after arriving that I saw a couple of Laughing Gulls flying around and a Barn Swallow flying shortly after I arrived. After going on a small hike through the woods where I saw the Western Tanager in January, I went to the beach where I saw a Common Loon flyby. After trying 2 more short walks in the bushy woods of Sandy Hook in search of Towhees, Thrashers, and any other songbirds that turned up nothing but a couple late Kinglets and a couple of Black-Capped Chickadees being flagged as rare (they’re common in Sandy Hook but not the county,) nothing turned up. However a walk to the north end turned up a Loon up close in breeding plumage and a distant Northern Gannet in the water, my first for the US. On the way back I took a short stop to Raritan Bay Waterfornt Park to try and see a Black-Headed Gull spotted there. Despite the Gull seemingly moving on, there was still a pair of Bonaparte’s Gull hanging around. The next day I went to Richard DeKorte Park in the meadowlands after hearing reports of Ruff. Of course I forgot to check the tide times and there were no mudflats open for the Ruff with high tide aboutDespite this their were plenty of Forster’s Terns flying around and a Snowy Egret at a nearby pond. The next day I got up early to try and see the Ruff at low tide. Despite initial struggles to find the bird from myself and other birders, with myself only seeing plenty of Yellowlegs including a few Lesser Yellowlegs, another birder located the Ruff far out on the mud flats and I was able to get in my scope for a couple seconds. After leaving the Eurasian visitor, I took a hike up the more woodsy side of DeKorte where plenty of Barn and Northern Rough-Winged Swallows were flying just inches from me on top a hill. The next day I went to Garrett Mountain in search of a Vesper Sparrow that had been spotted there. When arriving, I was greeted by not just a Vesper Sparrow but 5 of them, something many more experienced birders told me was unheard of in my area. After seeing the sparrows I went on a walk with another local birder who helped me learn how to bird in the Preserve that I had been to just once. Along said walk I saw plenty of Eastern Towhees and Brown Thrashers which I had missed in Sandy Hook earlier in the week. After getting home from Garrett Mountain at lunchtime, I decided to take a ride to the NJ/NY border in the north to Wallkill River National Wildlife Refuge which is apparently a good place to see Sandhill Cranes. Sure enough it didn’t take long after arriving to see the 2 cranes which are an east-coast lifer (saw them in Yellowstone before I started Birding.) After taking a break for Easter when I saw some of my first mid-spring migrants in Chimney Swift, Northern House Wren, and Northern Parula, I took a trip to Teaneck Creek. Despite it being a hotspot for Warblers in the past couple days, I only saw more Yellow-Rumped, although there was a Solitary Sandpiper and Gray Catbird there to add to my year list. Finally yesterday I went to Van Saun where after seeing a pair of Warbling Vireo, I saw my first Rarity for the pond in a Little Blue Heron foraging on the mudflats bringing my bird list to a nice round 150.
Mammals
10) Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes)
11) American Red Squirrel (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus)
Birds
129) Laughing Gull (Leucophaeus atricilla)
130) Barn Swallow (Hirundo rustica)
131) Common Loon (Gavia immer)
132) Northern Gannet (Morus bassanus)
133) Bonaparte’s Gull (Chroicocephalus philadelphia)
134) Forster’s Tern (Sterna forsteri)
135) Snowy Egret (Egretta thula)
136) Lesser Yellowlegs (Tringa flavipes)
137) Ruff (Calidris pugnax)
138) Northern Rough-Winged Swallow (Stelgidopteryx serripennis)
139) Vesper Sparrow (Pooecetes gramineus)
140) Brown Thrasher (Toxostoma rufum)
141) Eastern Towhee (Pipilo erythrophthalmus)
142) Sandhill Crane (Antigone canadensis)
143) Northern Parula (Setophaga americana)
144) Chimney Swift (Chaetura pelagica)
145) Northern House Wren (Troglodytes aedon)
146) Blue-Headed Vireo (Vireo solitarius)
147) Solitary Sandpiper (Tringa solitaria)
148) Gray Catbird (Dumetella carolinensis)
149) Warbling Vireo (Vireo gilvus)
150) Little Blue Heron (Egretta caerulea)
Progress:
Mammals- 11
Birds- 150
Herptiles- 1 (Got to get around to IDing some turtles)
Total- 162
Birds
275. Common Nighthawk Chordeiles minor
I've become so desperate for new state birds that I took a canoe out on Lake Michigan today to go for Piping Plover. This is probably a really bad idea but I lived, and got my plovers! Plus another bonus bird (not new for my state list though)Thanks. Looked through these again and yes - 265 birds is correct. My mammal total is 24.
Took a family trip to Shenandoah, Great Smoky Mountains and New River Gorge National Parks. No lifers for me, but 3 for my daughter! We stopped in Baltimore on the way and had a wonderful visit with @zoo_enthusiast and @zoo_sipsik
DL = Daughter Lifer
Baltimore, MD:
14. Groundhog (Marmota monax) DL (Apr 12)
Great Smoky Mountains National Park, TN:
15. American Red Squirrel (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus) DL (Apr 16)
16. American Black Bear (Ursus americanus) DL- she was super excited about this one! (Apr 17)
17. Coyote (Canis latrans)
Thank you for that note re reptiles. I will correct it next time I have a reptile to add. In the meantime, a couple of birds from a quick trip to Brisbane for a wedding.Here are the totals for everybody so far (albeit with some question marks added for the miscalculations mentioned in the post above, for those not yet corrected):
BIRDS:
Chlidonias – 411
birdsandbats – 265
Mehdi – 240
Mr. Zootycoon – 235
WhistlingKite24 – 228
Dr. Wolverine – 223
DesertTortoise – 219
MRJ – 213
Crotalus – 212
DaLilFishie – 205
Platypusboy – 194
oflory – 188
Bisonblake – 181
Maguari – 178
Ituri – 176
Prochilodus246 – 163
Hix – 160
Tiktaalik – 159
KiwiBirb – 150
Najade – 144
Lota lota – 132
Tetzoo Quizzer – 130
amur leopard – 127
Osedax – 121
Dr. Loxodonta – 111
Ding Lingwei – 110
Junklekitteb – 101
Lafone – 100
komodoskar – 95
CarnotaurusSastrei – 92
BerdNerd – 91
akasha – 88
DesertRhino150 – 70
MOG2012 – 68 ?
Matthew Typpo – 57
Enzo – 51 ?
Yoshistar888 – 28
KevinB – 15
WalkingAgnatha – 1
CMP – 1
MAMMALS:
Najade – 101
Chlidonias – 43
Mr. Zootycoon – 27
birdsandbats – 24
Maguari – 23
WhistlingKite24 – 18
Dr. Wolverine – 18
Giant Eland – 17
Crotalus – 17
MRJ – 16
Bisonblake – 15
Mehdi – 14
CarnotaurusSastrei – 14
Yoshistar888 – 13
DesertTortoise – 13
Prochilodus246 – 13
DaLilFishie – 13
Junklekitteb – 12
Osedax – 12
Platypusboy – 12
amur leopard – 12
oflory – 11
KiwiBirb – 11
akasha – 10
Dr. Loxodonta – 9
Matthew Typpo – 9
Hix – 9
Lafone – 8
MOG2012 – 7
BerdNerd – 7
Ding Lingwei – 6
Ituri – 6
Tetzoo Quizzer – 6
DesertRhino150 – 5
komodoskar – 4
KevinB – 2
Enzo – 2
REPTILES:
WhistlingKite24 – 21
MRJ – 21 ?
DesertTortoise – 17
Crotalus – 15
Najade – 14
Yoshistar888 – 13
Osedax – 11
birdsandbats – 10
DaLilFishie – 9
Mr. Zootycoon – 8
Bisonblake – 7
Enzo – 5
MOG2012 – 5
amur leopard – 5
oflory – 4
Matthew Typpo – 4
BerdNerd – 3
Hix – 3
Maguari – 2
CarnotaurusSastrei – 2
Prochilodus246 – 1
KiwiBirb – 1
akasha – 1
AMPHIBIANS:
Crotalus – 15
Najade – 13
Mr. Zootycoon – 10
DaLilFishie – 8
DesertTortoise – 8
WhistlingKite24 – 7
birdsandbats – 5
Maguari – 5
Prochilodus246 – 5
Tetzoo Quizzer – 3
Dr. Loxodonta – 2
BerdNerd – 2
Matthew Typpo – 2
Yoshistar888 – 1
Platypusboy – 1
oflory – 1
Bisonblake – 1
Osedax – 1
CarnotaurusSastrei – 1
FISH:
DaLilFishie – 147
WhistlingKite24 – 21
DesertTortoise – 8
Crotalus – 8
MOG2012 – 7
birdsandbats – 6
MRJ – 6
Maguari – 6
Matthew Typpo – 5
CarnotaurusSastrei – 4
Mr. Zootycoon – 2
Tetzoo Quizzer – 1
Prochilodus246 – 1
Hix – 1
INVERTEBRATES:
WhistlingKite24 – 296
Mr. Zootycoon – 263 (87 moths; 63 butterflies; 42 Odonata; 19 beetles; 14 grasshoppers; 13 flies; 12 bees; 8 gastropods; 5 isopods)
Prochilodus246 – 212
DaLilFishie – 104
Maguari – 51
Crotalus – 42 (29 assorted; 9 lepidoptera; 4 Odonata)
MOG2012 – 28 ?
Hix – 23
Tetzoo Quizzer – 19
MRJ – 15
akasha – 14
BerdNerd – 14
Lafone – 13
CarnotaurusSastrei – 10
Matthew Typpo – 7
Tiktaalik – 6 lepidoptera
DesertRhino150 – 4
Najade – 3
WalkingAgnatha – 2 (1 insect; 1 mollusc)