Big Mammal Day rules
After a rather lengthy interval, we are posting the ‘draft but hopefully close to final’ regulations for Big Mammal Days, or 24 hour Mammal Days. The rules were discussed at the last mammalwatching meeting, and there has been additional input from a variety of mammalwatching community members. Given the difficulty of identifying some of the smaller mammal species – notably the bats which sometimes cannot be identified without looking at their dentition – we have tried to come up with rules that provide a degree leeway on identification, while hewing to the concept of encouraging people to develop their natural history and wildlife identification skills.
If you are interested in Big Mammal Days, we encourage you to have a look at the regulations and if you have any further ideas and inputs please put them in the comment section below. Hopefully we’ll get the final rules posted by the end of May – until a new snag appears that none of us had thought of….
Big Mammal Day Rules_Draft
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11 Comments
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covillbirdy
Great work!
I am curious if you all had talked about the idea of “unshared species” and if there’s a maximum limit for a Big Day?
As in birding Big Days, the team can only have a maximum of 5% unshared species between them. Example being if the team total between all members is 100 species, but 7 of those are unshared (I.e. not everyone in the group saw/heard it) then the final total would be 98 species. Knocking 2 off to make the total unshared 5% (instead of 7%).How does this fit in with a Mammal Big Day?
I image a Bobcat or some mustelid running across the road not to be relocated as a perfect example of a possible unshared species on a Mammal Big Day. That type of thing happens a lot on birding Big Days! -
vmoser
Some things that could be discussed:
“In cases where two mammals of the same genus are clearly visually different then up to two
species may be ascribed to genus level” => I would say one species per genus only. I feel there might be too much incentive to stretch the rules otherwise.Then in the long-term, I think the statement “The ‘species identification’ feature on bat detectors cannot be used as identification confirmation due to unreliability.” might not hold up: The species identification for some species is already very good and with larger databases and better algorithms, it will get even better. I can imagine that it might even become better than many experts at some point.
I suggest to reformulate: “The ‘species identification’ feature on bat detectors cannot be solely used as identification confirmation.” But it is essentially the same with thermals and binoculars, who will all come with AI-assisted identification within the next years. Identification must be made by a human, not a machine in the end.I very much support the initiative of no aircraft, and even suggest encouraging “green big days” with public transport and muscle strength as the gold standard 😉
Last but not least: In the age of social media, reporting platforms, and so on, I am not so sure about the Outside information rule – I see the birders have this as well. It’s not as easy to avoid information now, especially if you share your progress live from the field. What about a rule that only public information might be used on the day itself (e.g. iNaturalist observations, Social media posts)? After all, mammalwatching should also be a social activity…
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BWKeelan
I have done a number of mammal and birding big days, and I believe it is important to have a rule regarding the percentage of species that must be seen and identified by every single participant on a team. The 95% criterion is still used by the American Birding Association (https://www.aba.org/aba-big-day-count-rules/). Without some limitation like this, larger teams have too great an advantage over smaller teams, so that team size grows and team cohesion diminishes. My understanding is that when the ABA first instituted this rule, larger team totals dropped by about 10%! I feel that the 95% value used by the ABA is pretty generous for birds, but for mammals I think a lower threshold, maybe 90%, would be reasonable. This reflects the greater difficulty getting every team member on a nocturnal mammal obscured by foliage, compared to detection of birds in the daylight, largely by vocalization. — Brian Keelan (keelan@warpmail.net)
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Sebastian Kennerknecht
Well done Charles, looks fantastic. Glad you put the ethics guidelines in there as well!