As a keen user of eBird I keep on discovering new and exciting things. If you don't use this magnificent and nerd-pleasing piece of citizen science just hit back, this will take you to my last post which was about seeing no birds and will still be more interesting than this one which is about keyboard shortcuts.
F is for Coot. In an ideal world I would just wander around the patch saying the names of birds. Saying "Coot" would add a Coot to my in-progress eBird tally. Saying "2 Coots" would add two and so on. This would also allow me to keep looking at the birds, but as everyone knows we don't live in an ideal world and so unfortunately this is not yet a feature. Hopefully come clever bods are working on it, but for now fingers are required and as the weather gets colder my desire to have them encased in nice warm gloves is increasing. I don't have one of those fancy gloves which allows touchscreen use via some pad embedded in the fingertip, and in any event the phone is locked to my fingerprint (although apparently I can use my face too, lucky Samsung). So I am on the lookout for the most efficient way to input the birds I see so that my glove can go back on as soon as possible. Rather than painstakingly enter C-o-o in order to bring up Coot, I have discovered that the letter F brings it up. It is second on the screen after Feral Pigeon, but that is enough to then add however many Coots it is that I have just counted. And seeing as Coots are one of the only species of birds on the [dead] patch at the moment I find I am needing to count them quite a lot. Yes, the humble letter F is going to be very useful.
This got me thinking to see if there were any other useful time-savers out there for urban UK patch workers. Here's what I have found so far. Note that these may not take you directly to the species, but they will bring that species onto the screen sufficiently high up that scrolling won't be needed. I've not included wildfowl as they are always at the top of the page anyway when the seach bar is empty.
D = Collared Dove, Stock Dove, Great Spotted Woodpecker
E = Egyptian Goose, Moorhen
F= Feral Pigeon, Coot
J = Jay, Jackdaw
K = Kestrel
L = Little Grebe
N = Parakeet
U = Larus sp (invaluable)
W = Woodpigeon, Cormorant
There are infinitely more possibilities for two letters, but here are the ones I have found most useful locally.
CA = Crow, Goldfinch
CC = Chiffchaff, Chaffinch
CH = Greenfinch
ER = Robin
FI = Finch sp, for all vizmiggers with a conscience
GC = Great Crested Grebe
GU = all Gulls
MA = Magpie
ME = Meadow Pipit
RE = Redwing, Goldcrest
SI = Siskin
SK = Skylark
SO = Song Thrush
SP = Sprawk, Sparrow
ST = Starling
TI = all Tits
TU = all Thrushes
WO = Woodpeckers
What about more complex acronyms? Well this is a thing of beauty - I believe any species can be found with a combination of just four letters, ie EUWI = European Wigeon, MUSW = Mute Swan and so on, but whilst these might have entered birding lexicon for birders in the US, they hardly trip off the tongue for us. However there are a few that do work.
BHG = Black-headed Gull
GBB = Great-black Backed Gull
GSWP = Great-spotted Woodpecker
LBB = Lesser Black-backed Gull
LTT = Long-tailed Tit
I think that generally there are quicker ways to get there (as described above), but nonetheless if you know this and are also handy with some of the Latin binomials, you can generally work out what will likely get you to the bird you want quite quickly with just a few letters - I find this far easier than scrolling up and down the entire list. There are some other gems buried in there, perhaps showing eBird's American heritage, for instance BB = Grey Plover, but I expect I have only scratched the surface.
Anyhow, I hope at least one other person found this useful. If you too use eBird and have found some useful shortcuts, do please let us all know.