Count birds anywhere you like, for 15 minutesor or longer if you wish. Keep track of the kinds of birds you see and how long you watched.
Make your best estimate of how many birds you saw of each species. Huge flocks may be a challenge,but your best guess is still valuable.
Enter your list(s) online at:
http://gbbc.birdcount.org/
In 1995, the first Wisconsin Breeding Bird Atlas was started. This project involved over 1,600 observers, who amassed more than 170,000 observations of 237 species. Twenty years later, it’s time to do it again in order to ensure we have the information necessary to conserve breeding birds.

A checklist of songbirds of Wisconsin can be found at the following link:
Birds seen in Sherwood (WI Breeding Bird Atlas)
Species   Breeding Status
Canada Goose   Confirmed
Wood Duck   Confirmed
Mallard   Confirmed
Blue-winged Teal   Confirmed
Green Heron   Probable
Cooper's Hawk   Confirmed
Red-tailed Hawk   Probable
American Kestrel   Confirmed
Killdeer   Probable
Spotted Sandpiper   Probable
Rock Pigeon   Confirmed
Mourning Dove   Probable
Chimney Swift   Confirmed
Ruby-throated Hummingbird   Probable
Belted Kingfisher   Confirmed
Red-headed Woodpecker   Confirmed
Red-bellied Woodpecker   Probable
Downy Woodpecker   Confirmed
Hairy Woodpecker   Confirmed
Northern Flicker   Confirmed
Eastern Wood-Pewee   Confirmed
Willow Flycatcher   Confirmed
Least Flycatcher   Confirmed
Eastern Phoebe   Probable
Great Crested Flycatcher   Confirmed
Eastern Kingbird   Confirmed
Yellow-throated Vireo   Confirmed
Warbling Vireo   Confirmed
Red-eyed Vireo   Confirmed
Blue Jay   Confirmed
American Crow   Confirmed
Horned Lark   Confirmed
Purple Martin   Confirmed
Tree Swallow   Confirmed
Northern Rough-winged Swallow   Confirmed
Bank Swallow   Confirmed
Cliff Swallow   Probable
Barn Swallow   Confirmed
Black-capped Chickadee   Confirmed
White-breasted Nuthatch   Confirmed
House Wren   Confirmed
Winter Wren   Probable
Marsh Wren   Confirmed
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher   Confirmed
Eastern Bluebird   Confirmed
Wood Thrush   Probable
American Robin   Confirmed
Gray Catbird   Confirmed
Brown Thrasher   Confirmed
European Starling   Confirmed
Cedar Waxwing   Confirmed
Yellow Warbler   Confirmed
Chestnut-sided Warbler   Probable
American Redstart   Confirmed
Ovenbird   Probable
Common Yellowthroat   Confirmed
Scarlet Tanager   Probable
Eastern Towhee   Confirmed
Chipping Sparrow   Confirmed
Field Sparrow   Confirmed
Savannah Sparrow   Confirmed
Song Sparrow   Confirmed
Swamp Sparrow   Confirmed
Northern Cardinal   Confirmed
Rose-breasted Grosbeak   Probable
Indigo Bunting   Confirmed
Bobolink   Confirmed
Red-winged Blackbird   Confirmed
Eastern Meadowlark   Confirmed
Common Grackle   Confirmed
Brown-headed Cowbird   Confirmed
Orchard Oriole   Confirmed
Baltimore Oriole   Confirmed
House Finch   Confirmed
American Goldfinch   Probable
House Sparrow   Confirmed
High cliff State Park signature species
Trumpeter Swan,
American White Pelican
Northern Parula Warbler
Redbreasted Nuthatch
High cliff State Park signature species
Trumpeter Swan,
American White Pelican
Northern Parula Warbler
Redbreasted Nuthatch
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| Wisconsin's favorite birds | 
While habitat loss is the leading cause of bird population declines, recent
research estimates that billions of birds are directly killed in the U.S. each year by various human-caused actions including predation by feral or free roaming cats, collisions with buildings, cars, and
other structures, and agricultural chemicals. Individual citizens, businesses, homeowners, and land
managers can all help save millions of birds by reducing or eliminating these direct sources of mortality. 




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