Bird Codes

Quick 4-letter code lookup

Published by: Nemesis Code
Downloads
Revenue

Description

Are you looking for a way to speed up your field notes so you can focus on actually looking at birds? Do you see birders using codes for birds on listservs and want to look them up? Do you want to enter your eBird checklists faster?
Alpha codes are four letter abbreviations assigned to bird species as a quick way to refer to them. These codes are commonly used in field notes to quickly record sightings and other situations where writing down the entire species name is impractical. This app allows you to search and learn the alpha codes created using the Pyle and DeSante (2003) system which defines alpha codes for all 2078 species recorded in the AOU (American Ornithologists’ Union) area. You can quickly search by either the birds name or by the alpha code.
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Bird Codes FAQ

  • Is Bird Codes free?

    Yes, Bird Codes is completely free and it doesn't have any in-app purchases or subscriptions.

  • Is Bird Codes legit?

    ✅ The Bird Codes app appears to be high-quality and legitimate. Users are very satisfied.

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  • How much does Bird Codes cost?

    Bird Codes is free.

  • What is Bird Codes revenue?

    To get estimated revenue of Bird Codes app and other AppStore insights you can sign up to AppTail Mobile Analytics Platform.

User Rating
App is not rated in Romania yet.
Ratings History

Bird Codes Reviews

Terrific app, needs taxonomic update

AutreVie on

United States

I rely on this app (ver. 2.2) as the quickest way to search for band codes and proper scientific names but it is out-of-date. It could benefit from adding new US birds (accepted vagrants) and a taxonomy update, reflecting splits: - Western Scrub-Jay to California and Woodhouse’s in 2016; - Clapper Rail to Clapper and Ridgway’s in 2014; - genus split for the North American cormorants in 2021. - et al.

It’s the conflicts I want to know

birdrr on

United States

CEWA was my first. More recently NOSH surprised me. So many wrens it was bound to happen, so we skip CAWR. It takes time ( maybe many years) to encounter them. So it would be nice if the app displayed species in conflict when you enter a guess that’s not a legitimate code.

Functional

VZPIPL on

United States

No bells and whistles. Just exactly what you need to confirm a banding code.

Never updated

Girl&GordonSetter on

United States

Names and codes need to be updated regularly. These are not, so it’s useless.

Easy Banding codes / 4 letter codes

-CHE- on

United States

Next time you want to make sure you’re not crazy, that there isn’t anything normally called a YHBB or a CEWA, you can check here instantly. One thing well.

Pleasantly surprised

MikeyB9006 on

United States

There really is an app for everything..

Please update...

FOWLR on

United States

Great app, please update for larger screen.

Does the job without much fuss

avocet32 on

United States

Especially good for people who make up codes when posting their sightings. Using codes is controversial, but if you are going to do it you should use the correct code. Not all of them are obvious because of duplications.

Quick and easy

debissister on

United States

A comprehensive, user-friendly solution.

Very handy

perefalcon on

United States

Since learning about these codes I've been using them to both enter sightings more rapidly in eBird and to code my photos.

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App Info

Category
Reference
Publisher
Nemesis Code
Languages
English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Polish, Russian, Spanish
Recent release
2.2 (7 years ago )
Released on
Feb 11, 2012 (12 years ago )
Last Updated
1 day ago
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