Species: American Wigeon (Mareca americana)
eBird code: amewig
Prebreeding migration: January 25 to May 24
Postbreeding migration: August 9 to December 6)
Abundance: Abundance data provided by Cornell Lab of Ornithology | eBird, resampled to 100 km cells. The highest values are truncated down to the 99th percentile of the values to eliminate extreme outliers. BirdFlow models are trained on abundance.
Flux: Flux represents the relative number of birds migrating through each part of the landscape in a week given the model parameters and the assumption that the bird follow a straight path for each transition. To calculate flux the probability of each movement in the model (excluding stationary birds) is assigned to a line that connects the start and end of the movement. The probability of each line is then added to all the cells within 50 km of the line.
These stochastic routes are generated from the BirdFlow model (see BirdFlowR::route
) and can be used to assess performance. Each step of the route is
created by sampling the probabilities assigned to the bird’s next
location given a starting date and location. The initial locations are
sampled from the probability distribution for the species at the start
of the migration. The stay length is one if the bird moves on
immediately and longer when the bird stays in the location for multiple
steps.
The metadata here comes from eBird via ebirdst::ebirdst_runs.
Data quality ranges from 0 to 3, with 3 being the highest quality.
Data quality: 3, 3, 3, 3 (prebreeding, breeding, postbreeding, and
nonbeeding)
Version year: 2022
Release year: 2023
Model date: 2024-08-14
Traverse correlation: 0.9704
Mean step correlation: 0.972
Min step correlation: 0.8652
For an explanation of the correlations see BirdFlowR::distribution_performance()
BirdFlow is a joint project between the University of Massachusetts Amherst and the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. It is funded by the US National Science Foundation
American
Wigeon BirdFlow Model by
BirdFlowScience
is licensed under
CC
BY
4.0
This material uses data from the eBird Status and Trends Project at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, eBird.org. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology.
Last updated: 2025-03-25