The answer really doesn't matter.  Unless the bird is a new state record or 
something, who is going to know or care if Nate (or any other hypothetical 
birder) counts it on his day, year, county, life, or any other list?  In fact, 
99.99% of birders won't even know if he keeps a day, year, county, life, or any 
other list at all.  Should it be something highly unusual such as a potential 
first state record, and the rationale for believing this is convincing, the 
observer is free to document the observed details and submit them with the 
photo for consideration by MOURC.  Either way, the observer can list it or not, 
and likewise, MOURC will do what it feels is most defensible.  What's wrong 
with that?  
 
Just because this is being posted on the listserv doesn't mean this doesn't 
happen all of the time in the field.  Birder A sees a bird and can't make the 
identification, Birder B looks at it and says, "That's a Clark's Grebe because 
of X, Y, and Z."  Either Birder A looks in a guide, questions Birder B, 
believes Birder B to be credible and counts it--or not.  How often during group 
outings is a difficult-to-identify bird identified by one or two members of the 
group, then other members of the group peer through the scope and feel 
satisfied that they have viewed said species?   
 
For me, this would be a opportunity to hone my critical thinking skills a 
touch.  I would consider whether the person actually offered reasons for the 
identification and whether that person likely has credible experience with the 
species in question.  Then, I would still ask how other possible 
identifications can be ruled out......unless I just wanted to get back to 
birding, then I would just pass on Species X and start looking at other things! 
 My meager experience is that good birders usually welcome being questioned and 
either back up their assertions or reconsider what they are looking at.  As 
birders, we should all strive to improve our identification skills, but there 
isn't a need to pester each other about our listing 'skills'!  Sometimes, for 
me, having someone else help me identify a species is the best way to learn to 
identify it myself the next time.  
 
Consider this; even when I go out in the field by myself with a field guide, I 
am relying on someone else to help me with that identification--the authors of 
that guide.  It's worth noting that even field guides have mistakes or 
descriptions that unintentionally lead one toward misidentification, so why not 
rely on the testimony of other birders who can suggest reasons for this bird 
being identified as one species or another?  Perhaps bird identification is as 
much or more art than science?    
 
Nate, if one of the identifications someone suggests to you and the rationale 
for it pass the "smell test" and you can't poke holes in the logic, I'd say add 
it to any list you'd like.  Since you saw it in 'real life'--behavior, various 
angles, and all--you are by far the most credible observer compared to those of 
us viewing just a snapshot in time.                Shawn 
Conradhttp://users.2z.net/itasca_chippewa_birding/  



Date: Tue, 2 Sep 2008 07:50:18 -0700From: rwoodphd at yahoo.comTo: mou-net at 
moumn.orgSubject: Re: [mou] Shorebird ID help



Hi all, I have a follow-up question to this.Let's say one gets a bunch of 
response, and there is a consensus as to what the bird's ID is.What does the 
birder do in that situation?  Do you call it what the consensus says they think 
it is or do you leave it as an unidentified?I know what I would do, and I'd 
like to hear what the others of you out there think about this.I'd also be 
interested in knowing what the birding bodies think one should do.Richard
 Richard L. Wood, Ph. D.Hastings, MNrwoodphd at yahoo.com 


----- Original Message ----From: Pastor Al Schirmacher <pastoral at 
princetonfreechurch.net>To: mou-net at moumn.org; mnbird at lists.mnbird.net; 
BIRDCHAT at LISTSERV.ARIZONA.EDU; BIRDWG01 at LISTSERV.ARIZONA.EDU; Wisconsin 
Birding Network <wisbirdn at lawrence.edu>Sent: Tuesday, September 2, 2008 
9:18:46 AMSubject: [mou] Shorebird ID helpMy son, Nathan Schirmacher, took 
these photos of a shorebird (http://www.flickr.com/photos/natester166) at Foley 
Sewage Ponds, Foley, MN (central part of state) on Saturday, August 30th - 
click on the "Mystery Shorebird" section to the right, click on the photos to 
enlarge.We have discussed the ID without resolution, and would appreciate 
feedback.This bird fed alone, would not associate with the six Stilts 
present.Thanks!Al SchirmacherPrinceton, MNMille Lacs & Sherburne Counties 
---This mailing list is sponsored by the Minnesota Ornithologists' Union.  
Mailing list membership available on-line at 
http://moumn.org/subscribe.html.-----To unsubscribe send a blank email to 
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