What bird is Cornell?
What bird is Cornell?
The Cornell Lab of Ornithology has the solution: the free Merlin Bird ID app, designed to answer the simple question, “What’s that bird?” The free Merlin Bird ID app allows you to zoom in on a picture of any bird, such as the Blackburnian warbler, and determine what it is using artificial intelligence techniques.
How does Merlin Bird ID work?
Merlin Photo ID uses computer vision technology to identify birds in photos. Merlin learns to recognize bird species based on training sets of hundreds of thousands of photos from birders who share their images with eBird and the Macaulay Library.
What does the Cornell Lab of Ornithology do?
Our mission is to interpret and conserve the earth’s biological diversity through research, education, and citizen science focused on birds.
How much is the Cornell Guide to bird sounds?
The collection is available for $20 as an MP3 download (2.2GB), giving you the flexibility to listen to bird sounds on any device you’d like. Special thanks to the 482 recordists whose recordings made this collection possible.
How can you support the Cornell Lab of ornithology?
You’ll receive a Cornell Lab journal and Living Bird magazine. Give back to the birds with a donation today. Your gift helps us do more to improve the understanding and protection of birds. You can also Give as a Tribute. Perpetuate your love of birds and the Cornell Lab beyond a lifetime. Your legacy will sustain our work for generations to come.
What do you get from the Cornell bird journal?
You’ll receive a Cornell Lab journal and Living Bird magazine. Give back to the birds with a donation today. Your gift helps us do more to improve the understanding and protection of birds.
What kind of birds live in the Cornell Lab?
Barn Swallow by Johanna Beam/Macaulay Library; Golden-fronted Woodpecker by Marcy Barbosa/BirdSpotter; Tree Swallow by Marie Read; Calliope Hummingbird by Marya Moosman/Macaulay Library; Cornell Botanical Gardens by Justin Muir; Gunnison Sage-Grouse by Gerrit Vyn.