Results from this Great Backyard Bird Count are in, and they show a surprising trend among bird watchers.
The annual event invites people from around the world to spend time bird watching during a weekend in February 鈥 and report . Becca Rodomsky-Bish is project leader for the bird count. She says last year, COVID may have spurred more people to stay inside and birdwatch. But this year saw a 23 percent drop in the number of responses to the bird count. However, that doesn鈥檛 mean fewer people were participating.
鈥淭his year, people were getting out in big groups again and birding more collectively. So even though it looks like participation was down, there鈥檚 actually more people participating this year -- they just weren鈥檛 necessarily sending in their own lists.鈥
Franklin County turned in among Ohio鈥檚 88 counties, followed closely by Cuyahoga and Hamilton. However, Hamilton County had three of the Top 10 鈥渉ot spots鈥 with the greatest number of different species spotted 鈥 including one sighting of 8,000 European Starlings.
These were the top 13 hot spots in Ohio:
Fernald Preserve (Hamilton County)
Funk Bottoms Wildlife Area, Funk Rd. (Wayne County)
Pipe Creek Wildlife Area (Erie County)
Killdeer Plains Wildlife Area (Wyandot County)
Fernald Preserve, Lodge Pond (Hamilton County)
Great Miami River, Lost Bridge (Hamilton County)
Dublin Rd. Quarries, roadside (Delaware County)
Hebron Fish Hatchery and Wetlands (Licking County)
Walnut Woods Metro Park, Tall Pines Area (Franklin County)
Maumee Bay State Park, boardwalk (Lucas County)
Ohio & Erie Canal Towpath Trail, Manchester Rd. Trailhead (Summit County)
Lake Snowden (Athens County)
Northeast Ohio Regional Sewer District, 49th St. outflow (Cuyahoga County)
Rodomsky-Bish says bird counts in May and October also provide snapshots on where birds are moving during their migration. Known as Global Big Days, the next one is to celebrate World Migratory Bird Day.