It’s a new year and eBirders in North Central Washington Audubon Society’s four-county area (Chelan, Douglas, Ferry, and Okanogan) are busy birding around our area and entering their observations into eBird. This post presents the results of the January 2022 eBird entries.
There are 140 distinct bird species documented in the January 2022 eBird dataset for the four-county area. That is down from the 151 species documented in January 2021. The average number of bird species seen in the month of January and entered into eBird for the period 2015-2021is 136. The numbers show that 2022 is running ahead of average.
The January 2022 bird species found in eBird for the four-county area are shown in the table below. How many of these did you see?
You can view a taxonomically sorted list by clicking here.
- American Coot
- American Crow
- American Dipper
- American Goldfinch
- American Kestrel
- American Robin
- American Three-toed Woodpecker
- American Tree Sparrow
- American Wigeon
- Anna’s Hummingbird
- Bald Eagle
- Barn Owl
- Barred Owl
- Barrow’s Goldeneye
- Belted Kingfisher
- Bewick’s Wren
- Black-backed Woodpecker
- Black-billed Magpie
- Black-capped Chickadee
- Bohemian Waxwing
- Brewer’s Blackbird
- Brown Creeper
- Bufflehead
- Cackling Goose
- California Gull
- California Quail
- California Scrub-Jay
- Canada Goose
- Canada Jay
- Canvasback
- Canyon Wren
- Cassin’s Finch
- Cedar Waxwing
- Chestnut-backed Chickadee
- Chukar
- Clark’s Nutcracker
- Common Goldeneye
- Common Loon
- Common Merganser
- Common Raven
- Common Redpoll
- Cooper’s Hawk
- Dark-eyed Junco
- Double-crested Cormorant
- Downy Woodpecker
- Eared Grebe
- Eurasian Collared-Dove
- Eurasian Wigeon
- European Starling
- Evening Grosbeak
- Fox Sparrow
- Gadwall
- Golden Eagle
- Golden-crowned Kinglet
- Golden-crowned Sparrow
- Gray Partridge
- Gray-crowned Rosy-Finch
- Great Blue Heron
- Great Horned Owl
- Greater Scaup
- Green-winged Teal
- Hairy Woodpecker
- Harris’s Sparrow
- Hermit Thrush
- Herring Gull
- Hooded Merganser
- Horned Grebe
- Horned Lark
- House Finch
- House Sparrow
- Killdeer
- Lapland Longspur
- Lesser Goldfinch
- Lesser Scaup
- Mallard
- Marsh Wren
- Merlin
- Mountain Bluebird
- Mountain Chickadee
- Mourning Dove
- Northern Flicker
- Northern Goshawk
- Northern Harrier
- Northern Pintail
- Northern Pygmy-Owl
- Northern Saw-whet Owl
- Northern Shoveler
- Northern Shrike
- Osprey
- Pacific Loon
- Pacific Wren
- Peregrine Falcon
- Pied-billed Grebe
- Pileated Woodpecker
- Pine Grosbeak
- Pine Siskin
- Prairie Falcon
- Purple Finch
- Pygmy Nuthatch
- Red Crossbill
- Red-breasted Nuthatch
- Red-breasted Sapsucker
- Redhead
- Red-necked Grebe
- Red-tailed Hawk
- Red-winged Blackbird
- Ring-billed Gull
- Ring-necked Duck
- Ring-necked Pheasant
- Rough-legged Hawk
- Ruby-crowned Kinglet
- Ruddy Duck
- Ruffed Grouse
- Say’s Phoebe
- Sharp-shinned Hawk
- Sharp-tailed Grouse
- Short-eared Owl
- Snow Bunting
- Snowy Owl
- Song Sparrow
- Spotted Towhee
- Steller’s Jay
- Swamp Sparrow
- Townsend’s Solitaire
- Trumpeter Swan
- Tundra Swan
- Varied Thrush
- Virginia Rail
- Western Bluebird
- Western Grebe
- Western Meadowlark
- White-breasted Nuthatch
- White-crowned Sparrow
- White-headed Woodpecker
- White-winged Crossbill
- White-winged Scoter
- Wild Turkey
- Wilson’s Snipe
- Wood Duck
- Yellow-rumped Warbler
Is it possible to put the bird list in taxonomic order? Thanks for putting this altogether!
Yes, it is possible but it requires a lot more work to do that. I could spit out a PDF of the results and link to it but I’m not going to try to fit it into a blog format.