BUBO Listing News
The IOC World List has now been updated to the latest published version 10.2 from July 2020.
Of most interest to listers in Britain and Europe will be the split of Subalpine Warbler (have you seen Western or Eastern or both?!) Most American listers will have lost Northwestern Crow following its not unexpected lump with American Crow, whilst some Asian listers will be pleased that White-faced Plover is a separate species compared to Kentish Plover. Australian listers might find they now have one or two extra Grasswrens following the split of Striated.
Regional or country lists based on IOC, such as the IOC Western Palearctic list, have also been updated.
We automatically apply updates where we can, and in other cases you will be prompted for any taxonomic changes to address yourself.
If you have any queries about distributions or identification of individuals so that you know what you can count, do post in the forums so that other BUBO Listers can help out.
As well as the recently introduced Lockdown Listing, there are many other types of lists that birders like to keep. We support lots of these on BUBO Listing, some more frivolous than others!
All records | Any (wild) bird. The default list type. |
Self-found records | Birds you have found yourself, e.g. not twitched. We don't enforce rules for what exactly is meant by self-found: it has often been discussed - e.g. on the BUBO Forum, and see Punkbirder rules - and easily gets controversial! E.g. what if you are in a group, what if you re-find a bird that was missing? Decide on your own rules and use the comments when you enter a record on your list. |
Garden | Birds seen in or from your garden or yard. Read more about Garden/Yard Lists. |
Green: foot | Also known as zero-carbon lists, or BIGBYs (Big Green Big Year), all birds recorded must be whilst walking from your home or place of work. Read more about Green Birding in general from the Biking Birder and Green Birding Megastars. |
Green: non-motorised | Still green, but also allowing forms of non-motorised transport (e.g. bicycle, canoe). |
Green: public transport | Not quite as green, but allowing scheduled public transport (ground or water only, so no planes). |
Patchwork Challenge | Birds on your local patch as part of Patchwork Challenge. |
#LocalPatch | Birds on your local patch as part of #LocalBigYear. |
Lockdown: COVID-19 | Birds seen during lockdown because of COVID-19. Also consider the related Facebook groups #BirdTheFeckAtHome and The Self Isolating Bird Club. |
Winter | Birds seen during the winter season (December to February) |
Nocmig (Night Flight Call) | Nocturnal bird migration recording, i.e. bird calls recorded by 'nocmigging'. |
Photographic |
Birds that you have photographed (and ideally have an identifiable photo!) |
Audio | Birds that you have sound recorded (identifiably!) |
Ringing/Banding | Birds that you have ringed (banded). |
Nest | Nests seen. |
Juvenile | Birds seen in juvenile plumage, i.e. out of the nest but prior to moult into first-winter plumage. |
Television | Birds seen or heard on TV. Read more about Television Lists! |
False | Birds recorded anywhere in the world, i.e. not just within the actual list location. Hence a False Western Palearctic list includes species that have been recorded in the Western Palearctic and which you have seen anywhere in the world. |
All these different list types are in addition to the actual location, authority used, and whether it is a life list or year list, so you can have a self-found life list for your local patch, multiple garden lists for different places you have lived, a county green (non-motorised) year list, and a country false life list, for example.
You can show all lists within an area, whether they are for the full county itself or a more specific site, within it. For example, you can see all Ireland self-found country lists, or show the same and include all Ireland self-found site lists as well. Just ensure you 'show all sublocations as well' when you choose a list to view.
With a quarter of the world in lockdown because of the COVID-19 coronavirus, there clearly isn't much birding being done. Many of us are birding more regularly from our gardens, houses or apartments, or wherever else we are in lockdown, so we have just introduced lockdown lists to BUBO Listing. When you create a new list, choose 'Lockdown: COVID-19' from the list type dropdown.
Rather than need to add a specific site for where you are locked down, we suggest you add it to the county (or country). You can show all lists within the county, whether they are for the full county itself or a more specific site, even garden, within it: just ensure you 'show all sublocations as well' when you choose a list to view. You can do this for any list, e.g. year, life, self-found etc. Be sure to select list type of 'Lockdown: COVID-19' to see all lockdown lists within the selected location. For example, see all England lockdown lists.
Finally, please be sensible during this period of global crisis. Follow official advice, and stay at home.
We have just launched the ability to combine existing lists with each other on BUBO Listing. This means that if you have entered one or more country lists say, and wish to add records from these to update your World list, you can now do so.
Combining lists works across different taxonomies so you can add AOS records from a North America list into an IOC-based World list for example; because of taxonomy differences you are likely to find some records that cannot be automatically combined and you will be notified of these.
Combining lists works with lists that you have already created. If you wish to create an entirely new list based on records from an already existing one, Create New List already does exactly that. You can only combine lists one at a time, so if you want to combine your British list and your North American list into your World list for example, you could first combine the British list with your World list, then separately combine your North American list.
If a species does not exist on the list you are copying to, but is recognised by the authority, it will be added. If the species is already on the list then the details (date, location etc.) will be taken from the earlier of the two records from the lists being combined.
To combine a list with another:
- Select the Combine Lists option from the user menu when logged in.
- First select the primary list, i.e. the one to which you wish to add records, from the table.
- Then select the secondary list, i.e. the one which contains the records you wish to combine with the primary list, from the dropdown selection below the table.
- You will be asked to confirm before the combining is done. The operation is complicated and cannot be undone, so do check carefully (e.g. to see that you have primary and secondary lists the correct way round) before going ahead.
- You are also given the option to add a note to the location of each record. This is particularly useful when combining records with a World list since you can ensure that the country of the secondary list is carried across to the primary. For example, if I was combining a Norfolk county list into my World list I may have an existing species record with a location of "Cley". This location alone would be fairly meaningless on a World list, so I could add a location note of "Norfolk, England": the resulting World list entry would show as "Cley [Norfolk, England]".
- After combining you will be shown (and emailed) those species that have been copied. You may have some manual updates to make to the new primary list, particularly where taxonomies differ.
Note that if a species on the secondary list has been split or lumped on the primary list, it will not be copied. We recommend you process all taxonomic updates on the secondary list before combining lists.
If you encounter any problems at all then please Contact Us. As always we'd love to hear your feedback too - a posting in the forums is best for this so that other BUBO Listers can add their comments.
We have just launched 'group lists' in BUBO Listing. A few people have created accounts in the past for a group, but this is not something we officially permitted, for a couple of reasons:
- We have always insisted on real person names as we believe this is important for the openness in listing that we wish to see
- Group accounts are misleading and annoying for listers when viewing rankings tables: imagine being a high lister near the top of a rankings table for somewhere, only to find a combined list for a group of ten individuals above you!
We now support group lists in a better way for everybody.
- Any group lists are excluded from rankings tables by default, so these tables will always be for individual lists
- When viewing a rankings table, if group lists have been added, you will see a 'groups' icon that will reload the table with group lists displayed
- Group lists will be shown with the 'groups' icon beside their name
- Clicking the main 'groups' icon again will reload the table without the group lists
- If a particular list doesn't have any group lists yet, the groups icon will not be shown, so you will just see the list 'link' icon as currently.
Group lists are ideal for a society wishing to include the full species list for their recording area, whether this is a formal society or an informal group of watchers at a patch. For example, the rankings table for a local patch could then show the number one lister as the group list, containing all species ever recorded on the site, including historical records. This quickly shows individual listers how many more species they need to find! They are also ideal for tours, whether for a few friends who regularly travel together and wish to keep an overall list from their trips, or tour companies (like the just launched Bubo Birding!)

If you wish to create a group account then sign up as usual but select 'Yes' to the 'Group Account?' question. Any lists that a group account creates will automatically be treated as group lists. Alternatively, if you have already created a group account, or notice any lists that others have created before and are not bring treated as group lists, let us know and we will update them.