ABA Checklist - American Birding Association (original) (raw)
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ABA ChecklistGreg Nemes2025-04-11T12:06:05-04:00
ABA Checklist
This annotated list includes 1,153 species documented to have occurred in the ABA Area according to the criteria of the ABA Checklist Committee.
Version 8.17 – November 2024*
Downloadable Formats: PDF | CSV
The CLC has recently accepted two species to the ABA Checklist:
**Eastern Cattle-Egret (Ardea coromanda), Vega Gull (Larus vegae).
ABA rarity codes have been updated, and more. Details here >>
*Note that where discrepancies in names occur between Clements/eBird and the AOS, both are listed, that of AOS in parentheses. Note four-letter Alpha codes follow the English Names of the AOS. (December 2022)
ABA Checklist Committee Reports
2024 Pyle et al.
2023 Pyle et al.
2022 Pyle et al.
2021 Pyle et al.
2020 Pyle et al.
2019 Pyle et al. 2018 Pyle et al. 2017 Pyle et al.
2016 Pranty et al.
2015 Pranty et al. 2014 Pranty et al.
2013 Pranty et al.
2012 Pranty et al.
2011 Pranty et al.
2010 Pranty et al.
2009 Pranty et al.
2008 Pranty et al.
2007 Pranty et al.
2006 Pranty et al.
2005 Robbins et al.
2003 Robbins et al.
2002 Robbins et al.
2000-2001 Dunn et al.
1998-1999 Dunn et al.
1996-1997 Dunn et al.
1995 DeBenedictis et al.
1994 DeBenedictis et al.
1993 DeBenedictis et al.
1992 DeBenedictis et al.
1991 DeBenedictis et al.
1990 Gill et al.
1988-1989 Gill et al.
1987-1988 Gill et al.
1986 Gill et al.
1984-1985 Gill et al.
Checklist Codes
Code-1 and Code-2: Regularly occurring ABA Area avifauna.
Includes regular breeding species and visitors. There is no firm designation between Code-1 and Code-2 species, except that logically Code-1 species are more widespread and are usually more numerous. Code-2 species have a restricted range in the ABA Area, are widespread but occur in lower densities, or are quite secretive which makes their detection often difficult. We readily acknowledge that some Code-2 species are harder to find than some species that have higher codes.
Code-3: Rare.
Species that occur in very low numbers, but annually, in the ABA Area. This includes visitors and rare breeding residents.
Code-4: Casual.
Species not recorded annually in the ABA Area, but with six or more total records—including three or more in the past 30 years—reflecting some pattern of occurrence.
Code-5: Accidental.
Species that are recorded five or fewer times in the ABA Area, or fewer than three records in the past 30 years.
Code-6: Cannot be found.
The species is probably or actually extinct or extirpated from the ABA Area, or all survivors are held in captivity (or releases are not yet naturally re-established).
20200428_0566
Example of Code 1 species: American Robin. Photo @ Greg Neise
20131002_7531
Example of Code 2 species: Spectacled Eider. Photo @ Greg Neise
20141110_6242
Example of Code 3 species: Ferruginous Pygmy Owl. Photo @ Greg Neise
20160112_4350
Example of Code 4 species: Black-tailed Gull. Photo @ Greg Neise
20131109_9622
Example of Code 5 species: Amazon Kingfisher Photo @ Greg Neise
ABA Area
The ABA Area (sometimes referred to as the ABA Checklist Area) is essentially North America north of Mexico plus the Hawaiian Islands.
Specifically, the area encompassed is the 49 continental United States, the Hawaiian Islands, Canada, the French islands of St. Pierre et Miquelon, and adjacent waters to a distance of 200 miles from land or half the distance to a neighboring country, whichever is less.
Excluded by these boundaries are Bermuda, The Bahamas, and Greenland.
A subarea of the ABA Area, or other prescribed area, is as defined by its legal boundaries. If not legally defined otherwise, it includes adjacent water (rivers, lakes, bays, sounds, etc.) out to half the distance to a neighboring area, but not beyond 200 miles.
Birds observed on or over an ocean are counted for the area having jurisdiction over the nearest land, if within 200 miles.
Extirpated Exotics
With the 2014 changes to the Recording Rules and Interpretations, species in this appendix may now be counted on official lists submitted to the ABA’s Listing Central if:
- an individual of the species were encountered during the time when the species was present on the main Checklist, and
- the encountered individual belonged to, or strayed from, a population believed to be established at the time of the encounter.
For each species listed below, we have provided the year in which it was removed from the main ABA Checklist, as well as the populations that were considered countable. The year a species was removed from the main Checklist represents the last year during which an encounter with that species is considered countable on current lists. For example, you may now count a Yellow-headed Parrot seen in southeast Florida during or prior to 1982, but you may not count a Yellow-headed Parrot if you saw it during or after 1983.
Budgerigar
Removed from main Checklist: 2015
Population considered countable: Tampa Bay, FL
Crested Myna
Removed from main Checklist: 2004
Population considered countable: Vancouver, BC
African Collared-Dove
Removed from main Checklist: 1994
Populations considered countable: Los Angeles, CA; St. Petersburg, FL; Montgomery, AL; Houston, TX
Yellow-headed Parrot
Removed from main Checklist: 1982
Population considered countable: southeast FL
Blue-gray Tanager
Removed from main Checklist: 1982
Population considered countable: south FL
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