Birds chart

  1. Top 31 Backyard Birds In Minnesota (Free ID Chart)
  2. Birds of North America
  3. Merlin Bird ID – Free, instant bird identification help and guide for thousands of birds – Identify the birds you see
  4. Birds of Washington State
  5. Backyard Bird Identification Guide (Identify Your Visitors)
  6. Top 32 Backyard Birds In Washington (Free ID Chart)
  7. Outdoor Fun: 50 Bird Species and the Sounds they Make
  8. How Long Do Birds Live?
  9. Birds of Washington State
  10. Merlin Bird ID – Free, instant bird identification help and guide for thousands of birds – Identify the birds you see


Download: Birds chart
Size: 59.10 MB

Top 31 Backyard Birds In Minnesota (Free ID Chart)

Have you wondered what those birds are that are visiting your backyard in Minnesota? Well, this guide will help you to find out how to identify these birds by sight and sound and what time of year you can spot them in Minnesota. Also, get a free ID chart to print with the most common backyard birds in Minnesota. Backyard birds in Minnesota all year: American Crow, Black-capped Chickadee, Downy Woodpecker, Blue Jay, White-breasted Nuthatch, Hairy Woodpecker, Northern Cardinal, Red-bellied Woodpecker, House Sparrow, European Starling, Red-breasted Nuthatch, House Finch, Pileated Woodpecker Backyard birds in Minnesota in summer: American Robin, Song Sparrow, Red-winged Blackbird, American Goldfinch, Common Yellowthroat, Mourning Dove, Chipping Sparrow, Common Grackle, Barn Swallow, House Wren, Gray Catbird, Brown-headed Cowbird, Yellow Warbler, Cedar Waxwing, Baltimore Oriole, Northern Flicker, Ruby-throated Hummingbird Backyard birds in Minnesota in winter: Dark-eyed Junco These are the most common backyard birds in Minnesota that may visit your lawn or feeders. They are the birds that appear most frequently on state checklists submitted by bird watchers on This article gives you identification information and photos to help you identify and attract more of the common backyard birds that you can spot in Minnesota. If you like backyard birding you will probably enjoy spotting some How to Identify Birds These free bird identification worksheets have all the common backyard bir...

Birds of North America

Enter Bird's Name in Search Box: www.birds-of-north-america.net This Birds of North America bird guide has over 1,000 bird species. This includes sub-species, exotics and birds of interest. We hope it will help you identify birds that have been seen on or near the continent of North America. Classic Collection of North American Birds Ltd, also known as CCNAB is for the beginners and the experienced birders. One of the primary goals is to show birds listed on the ABA (American Birding Association) list, which includes all the native birds and the vagrants, who have been visitors or strays from other countries or seas. All birds are listed alphabetically by bird families, including warblers, thrushes, waterfowls, waders, owls, eagles, hawks to name a few. I hope you will take the time to search through the CCNAB website, please enjoy. Fun Facts on the Birds of North America Widest Wing Span: American Pelican and the California Condor - 109" or 277cm Shortest Wing Span: Lucifer Hummingbird - 4 in or 10cm Biggest Bird: California Condor - 26 1/2 lbs or 12kg Smallest Bird: Calliope Hummingbird - 1/10 oz or 2.7g Tallest Bird: Whooping Crane - 52 in or 132.1cm Shortest Bird: Calliope Hummingbird -3 1/4 in or 8.25cm Fastest Bird: Peregrine Falcon - 70 mph flying, over 200 mph diving or 112 kmh flying, over 322 kmh diving Slowest Bird: Ruffed Grouse - 22 mph or 35.5 kmh Longest Migration: Arctic Tern - 12,000 mi (one direction) or 19,000km (one direction) References to Other Bird S...

Merlin Bird ID – Free, instant bird identification help and guide for thousands of birds – Identify the birds you see

Bird ID Wizard—Step-by-step Answer three simple questions about a bird you are trying to identify and Merlin will give you a list of possible matches. Merlin offers quick identification help for all levels of bird watchers and outdoor enthusiasts to help you learn about the birds in any country in the world. Identify Bird Songs and Calls Sound ID listens to the birds around you and shows real-time suggestions for who’s singing. Compare your recording to the songs and calls in Merlin to confirm what you heard. Sound ID works completely offline, so you can identify birds you hear no matter where you are. Available for birds in the US, Canada, Europe, with some common birds of Central and South America, and India. More species and regions coming soon.

Birds of Washington State

Birds Connect Seattle’s Online Guide to the Birds of Washington State BirdWeb is an unrivaled online guide to the birds of Washington State. The description of each of Washington’s regularly occurring species is packed with information on natural history, seasonal distribution and abundance, behavior, diet, breeding, and conservation status. There are also helpful distribution maps, brief accounts of rarities, photographs and sounds! Boasting an upgraded graphic design and functionality, BirdWeb includes detailed descriptions of the ten ecoregions of Washington with representative birding sites. Want to learn more about your favorite bird? Want to learn about the habitat of Washington State? Want to find a good birding site for this weekend? Go to BirdWeb to find out why this is such a well-used resource, by birders both novice and expert.

Backyard Bird Identification Guide (Identify Your Visitors)

The Summary The best way to undertake backyard bird identification is not necessarily to run to your field guide as soon as you see an unfamiliar bird in your yard. Instead, continue to watch the bird and jot down as many details about it as you can while you can still see it. Include quick sketches too; don’t worry – they don’t have to be artistic masterpieces! Then you can use your field guide, or this page, to identify the bird at your leisure later on.

Top 32 Backyard Birds In Washington (Free ID Chart)

Have you wondered what those birds are that are visiting your backyard in Washington? Well, this guide will help you to find out how to identify these birds by sight and sound and what time of year you can spot them in Washington. Also, get a free ID chart to print with the most common backyard birds in Washington. In Washington American Goldfinches and Barn Swallows are more common in summer and Dark-eyed Juncos and Anna’s Hummingbirds are more common in winter. Backyard birds in Washington all year: American Robin, Song Sparrow, American Crow, Spotted Towhee, Black-capped Chickadee, Dark-eyed Junco, European Starling, Northern Flicker, White-crowned Sparrow, House Finch, Red-winged Blackbird, Anna’s Hummingbird, Chestnut-backed Chickadee, Steller’s Jay, Red-breasted Nuthatch, House Sparrow, Yellow-rumped Warbler, Pine Siskin, Golden-crowned Kinglet, Downy Woodpecker, Mourning Dove, Eurasian Collared-Dove, Hairy Woodpecker Backyard birds in Washington in summer: American Goldfinch, Barn Swallow, Cedar Waxwing, Swainson’s Thrush, Rufous Hummingbird, Purple Finch, Common Yellowthroat Backyard birds in Washington in winter: Golden-crowned Sparrow, Ruby-crowned Kinglet These are the most common backyard birds in Washington that may visit your lawn or feeders. They are the birds that appear most frequently on state checklists submitted by bird watchers on This article gives you identification information and photos to help you identify and attract more of the common backyard b...

Outdoor Fun: 50 Bird Species and the Sounds they Make

Click any bird to hear the sounds they make! Click a second time to pause the sound. Use our quick, clickable guide for identifying backyard birds by the sounds they make! Chose any of these popular species to hear its typical bird sounds, from vocalizations of parrots to the chirping of songbirds. As you're gardening in your backyard, relaxing Today, identification is easier when you can listen to birds singing in short sound clips. Click a bird to hear birds tweeting their "language." Note that some of these birds have different sounds based on the situation, too. For instance, many songbirds have an "alarm" noise along with its normal tittering that can sound a little different. Tweets can also have a different tune than full calls. But this list of 50 birds should certainly be able to get you started! There are Embed this image on your site: Sources: • "Asian Koel warbles.ogg"}}" by Jappalang (Wikimedia.org) • "Atlantic Puffin (Fratercula artica) (W1CDR0001416 BD3).ogg"}}" by The British Library (Wikimedia.org) • "Hirundo rustica - Barn Swallow - XC83449.ogg"}}" by Jonathon Jongsma (Wikipedia.org) • "Poecile atricapillus - Black-capped Chickadee - XC70185" by Jonathon Jongsma (Wikipedia.org) • "120323-010-canada_geese.wav" by reinsamba (FreeSound.org) • "Cardinal.wav" by CGEffex (FreeSound.org) • "Koekoek.mp3"}}" by haysmitts (FreeSound.org) • "Eurasian Wren (Troglodytes troglodytes) (W1CDR0001461 BD5).ogg"}}" by British Library (Wikimedia.org) • "Bird Whistling, Robin...

How Long Do Birds Live?

How long do birds live? Whether you want to ace this question at your next bird-themed trivia challenge or just impress someone spontaneously, here's the answer: Birds can live between four and 100 years, depending on the species. While it may win you trivia points, this answer may raise more questions than it resolves: Why is there such a range of lifespans? Which birds live the longest? Can some birds really live to be 100? Answering these questions proves to be surprisingly hard. In many cases, the seemingly simple question of how old is that bird can be impossible to answer. By learning a few basic facts about how birds age, however, we can gain some interesting insights into bird lifespans and even begin to understand which of the familiar species around us are likely to be living longer (and shorter) lives. Wisdom, a 69-year-old female Laysan Albatross, currently holds the record as the oldest-known wild bird. Photo by USFWS Birds don't age like we do As humans, we're accustomed to using visual hints to guess the age of someone or something. The neighbor's dog with flecks of gray fur and a stiff walk is obviously getting up in years. That huge gnarled tree in the park must have been there for decades. Birds are different. They don't get gray; they don't become arthritic; they don't get bigger with each passing year; they don't leave growth rings for us to count. In fact, once most birds develop their adult plumage, they essentially become impossible to age. How birds...

Birds of Washington State

Birds Connect Seattle’s Online Guide to the Birds of Washington State BirdWeb is an unrivaled online guide to the birds of Washington State. The description of each of Washington’s regularly occurring species is packed with information on natural history, seasonal distribution and abundance, behavior, diet, breeding, and conservation status. There are also helpful distribution maps, brief accounts of rarities, photographs and sounds! Boasting an upgraded graphic design and functionality, BirdWeb includes detailed descriptions of the ten ecoregions of Washington with representative birding sites. Want to learn more about your favorite bird? Want to learn about the habitat of Washington State? Want to find a good birding site for this weekend? Go to BirdWeb to find out why this is such a well-used resource, by birders both novice and expert.

Merlin Bird ID – Free, instant bird identification help and guide for thousands of birds – Identify the birds you see

Bird ID Wizard—Step-by-step Answer three simple questions about a bird you are trying to identify and Merlin will give you a list of possible matches. Merlin offers quick identification help for all levels of bird watchers and outdoor enthusiasts to help you learn about the birds in any country in the world. Identify Bird Songs and Calls Sound ID listens to the birds around you and shows real-time suggestions for who’s singing. Compare your recording to the songs and calls in Merlin to confirm what you heard. Sound ID works completely offline, so you can identify birds you hear no matter where you are. Available for birds in the US, Canada, Europe, with some common birds of Central and South America, and India. More species and regions coming soon.