Three Generations of Citizen Science: The Pioneer

Fifty years after launching the breeding bird survey, 70 years after starting a career in bird conservation, and nearly 100 years after his birth, Chan Robbins is still watching closely.

Editor's Note:聽The history of citizen science in this country runs back more than a century, driven by a chain of creative, obsessive thinkers, leading armies of passionate volunteers.聽Read about two other citizen scientists,聽听补苍诲听.

Chan Robbins belongs to another era. Not the Birth of Environmentalism 1960s,聽when he was involved in groundbreaking studies proving the effects of DDT on聽birds. Not even the Public Works 1940s, when he came to Maryland's newly聽established , where he has worked for seven decades. No,聽Robbins belongs to the era of the great naturalists鈥攖he 探花精选s and Petersons聽and Grinnells鈥攖o a time when our nation's woods, fields, streams, and skies teemed聽with unexamined wildlife.

Robbins's mind, now 96 years old and stuffed with more information about birds聽and trees and plants and weather patterns and population dynamics than most聽people could ever learn, is still nimble and curious in the way of all naturalists. And聽the man who wrote the Golden Guide, the man who created the annual Breeding聽Bird Survey a half-century ago, is now a living legend who continues to study birds.聽"He's been a hero of mine since he first put out his pioneering field guide in the mid-1960s," says John Fitzpatrick, director of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. "As my own聽career developed, I recognized more explicitly what a hero he was, not just to me聽but to the field of ornithology and bird conservation."

Robbins stands in the cool shifting shade beneath massive oaks, beeches, andhickories next to a bridge over the Patuxent River, listening intently and looking very much at home鈥攅ven if he has to lean on an aluminum walker. His spiky shock聽of white hair might have made Sting proud during the Police years, but Robbins is a聽kind and gentler presence; one colleague described his voice as "Winnie the Pooh's."聽

Robbins has lost the higher ranges of his hearing, something that happens to all聽birders fortunate enough to live so long. He is testing out new hearing aids, but they聽all amplify traffic noise. "I don't want to hear people as much as I want to hear聽birds," he says.聽

Robbins has accomplished great things in research and conservation around the聽globe. He pioneered ways to measure the effects of habitat fragmentation on bird populations in North and Central America. On the Pacific island of Midway, he聽tagged a Laysan Albatross in 1956 that he recaptured in 2002; it remains the oldest聽known living bird. He coauthored one of the first truly modern field guides, 鈥攔eferred to by fans as the Golden聽Guide, for the name of the guidebook series鈥攚hich has sold more than six million聽copies.

It is at Patuxent that Robbins has grounded his life's work. Patuxent is the nation's聽only refuge designated specifically for wildlife research. Founded in 1936, it has聽expanded from its original 2,656 acres to encompass 12,840 acres of upland forest,聽riparian area, and oak-pine savannah. The property has been divvied into 100-meter-square plots, each designated by small concrete markers. For more than 70聽years Robbins patrolled those 100-meter blocks, learning the things that time had to聽tell him about this patch of woods鈥攁nd thinking about what those things might聽mean on a broader scale. In the 1950s Robbins helped design and carry out DDT聽studies here that were integral to our understanding of how the pesticide affected聽birds. He watched others conduct aerial spraying of control plots with the deadly聽chemical and observed what happened to the birds that fed on earthworms there.聽"We ended that study in the 1950s," Robbins says, "but DDT derivatives last in the聽soil forever. The worms here are still toxic to birds." Recent research shows that聽DDT's toxic legacy persists across the globe.

Likewise, Robbins has documented how Northern Bobwhites, a once-common bird聽at Patuxent, have almost disappeared from the area. Red-eyed Vireos used to be the聽most numerous breeding bird here; they've declined precipitously, and nonnative聽House Finches have moved in. And if Robbins says a bird species is not as abundant聽as it used to be, he's not your grandfather sitting on a porch rocker remembering the聽old days. Robbins has the numbers.

Chandler Seymour Robbins grew up in Belmont, a Boston suburb, in a time and place where everything to the east of him was "houses and Boston" and everything聽to the west was woods and fields. He roamed those woods using 3X opera glasses to聽watch birds and other animals鈥攈is de facto biology training鈥攁nd spent his聽summers chasing shorebirds on the beach at Gloucester.

Robbins graduated from Harvard in 1940 with a physics degree, which he used to teach for a few years until, as an alternative to active duty in World War II, he joined聽the Civilian Public Service. He was transferred to Patuxent in 1943 to assist with聽bird banding projects. Two years later he officially began working for the U.S. Fish聽and Wildlife Service.

from on .

One day in the early 1950s, while sorting incoming mail, he read a letter from a聽woman noting that hundreds of robins had fallen dead on several college campuses聽after DDT was sprayed there. The letter writer wondered whether this was an聽isolated event. Robbins was already engaged in his DDT studies (they would later聽inform Rachel Carson's ), and he wondered how the pesticide and other factors were affecting bird populations nationally鈥攁nd how he could quantify any聽changes.

His answer was the . Americans, Robbins聽hoped, would willingly devote part of a day to a systematic national bird count. He聽wanted to generate a picture of breeding bird populations on a continental scale. "I聽had to devise a system that would create coverage of a substantial area at the same聽time every year, when birds are most active but when the migrants had moved聽through."

He designed several roadside counts to nail down the optimal day and length of the聽survey. After much field testing in various habitats across the continent, at various聽times of day and in different weather conditions, Robbins settled on what he felt聽were optimal timing and lengths for each survey. He worked out the kinks locally for聽a couple of years, then in 1966 launched the survey in states and Canadian聽provinces east of the Mississippi River. (It was later expanded to include all of the聽United States, Canada, and Mexico.) Observers covered 600, 24.5-mile routes that聽first year, stopping every half-mile to count鈥攂y eye or ear鈥攁s many birds as they聽could in a three-minute period. The survey has documented bird population聽dynamics nationally ever since, and today 2,000 observers across the continent聽collect data on more than 3,000 routes each year.

"Chan's insights and instincts set the Breeding Bird Survey protocols into motion,聽well before people were talking about declines of North American birds," says聽Cornell's Fitzpatrick. "He was prescient. He was energetic. And he was courageous,聽frankly, to dream big and get that whole process in motion."

The Breeding Bird Survey remains one of the world's foremost tools for monitoring聽avian population trends. David Ziolkowski, program biologist for the survey, says it聽is recognized as the foundation of non-game land-bird conservation in the United聽States and Canada. The data have pointed to the decline of Northern Bobwhites and聽various other grassland birds as well as the resurgence of Bald Eagles and Wild聽Turkeys. The findings also hint at some impacts of climate change by revealing聽distinct northward shifts of such species as the Red-bellied Woodpecker, Northern聽Cardinal, and Crested Caracara.

All of this from a man with no formal training in biology.

"We hear this term 'citizen science' so much nowadays, but it's a spectrum," says聽Ziolkowski. "Science is the course of asking questions in a methodical way that lets聽you get to real answers about things. Chan took things citizens do every day鈥攇o聽birding鈥攁nd collected that information in a scientific way. That will be his living聽legacy."

Robbins no longer participates in the bird count he started鈥攈e has suffered too聽much hearing loss to ensure accuracy. Though technically retired, he retains the title scientist emeritus, and his daughter Jane drives him to his office at the refuge聽several days a week, where he sifts through old records, collating banding data. "I聽joke that now that Chan's retired, he works 12-hour days instead of 14-hour days,"聽Ziolkowski says.

Robbins doesn't maintain a life list so much as dream of birds he still wants to see.聽He's off to Ecuador in February in search of a Harpy Eagle. And then there's the聽Brewster's Linnet. As a child, Robbins became fixated on a picture of the bird, a聽cross between a redpoll and a siskin. Only one sighting has ever been recorded.聽"William Brewster shot that bird a mile from my childhood house," Robbins says.聽"Growing up, I always thought, 'Only one has ever been seen? I've got to see another聽one.' " He may be nearing the century mark, but he isn't giving up: "I'm still looking."

Read about two other citizen scientists,聽听补苍诲听.