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Global Bird Weekend 2024Learn Count Share

Celebrate birds around the world on 10, 11, and 12 May 2024 by joining BirdLife, Global Birding and eBird in our seasonal birdwatching extravaganza. 

Our work has helped over 700 threatened bird species survive.

This Global Big Day, people everywhere are coming together to protect our feathered friends in big ways.

Join in on the fun by taking part in a bird-themed challenge below to help raise vital funds or donate so that together we can save the birds we all know and love.

Happy birding!

Fundraising from the USA? Do it tax efficiently with Friends of BirdLife International (FBLI).

Get Involved

No matter your circumstances there is something for everyone to enjoy and get involved on Global Bird Weekend.

  1. Be a citizen scientist for the day by counting how many species you can see.
  2. Raise awareness by sharing the magic of migration with your friends, family and colleagues.
  3. Fundraise to save birds and bring them back from the brink.
LEARN

Coming soon: Bird-themed challenges to help you in your fundraising

COUNT

Go out, count and submit all the birds you see to eBird on 11th May 2024.

SHARE

Share what you find on the day with your friends, and online to a huge community of nature lovers. On the day, we will provide a link to real-time checklists. Watch this space.

Find out what’s in your local flyway

Soaring across migration routes called flyways, like super highways in the sky, billions of birds cross deserts, mountains and oceans during migration.

This Global Bird Weekend, find out more about where the birds you spot are flying and why! Check out the map below to see where your local flyway leads.

Can you spot one of our hero species on May 11?

With its pole-to-pole migration, the Arctic Tern is a symbol of BirdLife’s international collaboration © Agami/Shutterstock

EAST ASIAN-AUSTRALASIAN FLYWAY CENTRAL ASIAN FLYWAY AMERICAS FLYWAY AFRICAN-EURASIAN FLYWAY
AFRICAN-EURASIAN FLYWAY
CENTRAL ASIAN FLYWAY
EAST ASIAN-AUSTRALASIAN FLYWAY
AMERICAS FLYWAY

AFRICAN-EURASIAN FLYWAY


One of the world’s greatest flyways, the African-Eurasian flyway links cultures, landscapes and people across the great continents of Africa, Europe and Asia. With three major routes from the Artic to Southern Africa, the birds on this flyway are some of the most persecuted on the planet, with at least 10% threatened with extinction. BirdLife International and its partners throughout the region are working tirelessly to combat major threats including the illegal killing of birds, collisions with energy infrastructure and habitat loss.


Hero Species

Introducing the White Stork: Known as the bringer of life, hope and good fortune, these majestic birds love people and create huge nests on trees, poles or rooftops! After this painstaking effort, these birds make sure to return to their nests every year. White Storks are no stranger to the dangers on this flyway, affected over the past decade by habitat loss, collisions with power lines, and hunting.

FACTSHEET


500+
Species

100+
Countries

50+
BirdLife Partners

CENTRAL ASIAN FLYWAY


Although it’s the shortest of the world’s flyways, the Central Asia flyway is used by more than 600 migratory bird species. It also covers 30 countries, ranging from the cold of Siberia in the north to the tropical islands of the Maldives – some birds migrating in this area cross the mighty Himalayas many times throughout their lifetime! More than 48 species that use the Central Asian Flyway are globally threatened and 40% are in decline. BirdLife Partners in the region work together to provide safe havens for migratory species, fighting the impacts of hunting, habitat degradation, human disturbance and climate change.


Hero Species

With striking black stripes and a bright yellow beak, the Bar-headed Goose is an impressive migratory bird! Between 97,000-118,000 Bar-headed Geese cross the Himalayas (including over Mount Everest) several times throughout their lives. They have special physical adaptations to survive this incredible altitude and choose specific times of day to fly when the air is cooler and denser.

FACTSHEET


600+
Species

30+
Countries

8
BirdLife Partners

EAST ASIAN-AUSTRALASIAN FLYWAY


The East Asian-Australasian Flyway is the most densely populated flyway in the world, supporting almost 2 billion people! It also incredibly species-rich with 600 bird species traversing across its 37 countries from Alaska to Southeast Asia, Australia and New Zealand. BirdLife International’s Flyways Initiative with the Asian Development Bank will mobilise $3 billion to protect 50 priority wetland sites within the zone, benefitting both the migratory birds and nearly 200 million people who rely on these ecosystems for their livelihoods.


Hero Species

Although the East Asian-Australasian Flyway hosts a huge array of birds, you can also find some of the most endangered birds in the world on this unique flyway. The Spoon-billed Sandpiper is a gorgeous wader, so named for its uniquely shaped beak specially designed for feeding on marine invertebrates! Despite being less than 800 spoon-billed sand pipers left in the world, a huge conservation effort to save them is underway so there is still hope yet for spoonie!

FACTSHEET


600+
Species

37
Countries

15+
BirdLife Partners

Working with Communities Along the East-Asian Australasian Flyway

AMERICAS FLYWAY


The Americas Flyway is the most species-rich in the world, impressively hosting over 2000 different bird species! Spanning the continent from Tierra del Fuego in Southern Argentina to the Arctic Circle in the North, the Americas Flyway contains three migratory routes that cross 35 countries. 90 species on this flyway are globally threatened. BirdLife International is working with Audubon (BirdLife Partner in the USA) and CAF (The Development Bank of Latin America) to pioneer blended financing to protect vast areas across the flyway. The Americas Flyway initiative will mobilise funding to protect 30 sites across the migration routes, protecting birds, their habitats and the people who depend on them.


Hero Species

The Rufous Hummingbird is a small but mighty migrant! At just 3 inches long, this brightly coloured bird flies over 3000 miles on their migration journey! They also have a fantastic memory, remembering where to find food even one year later, and are fiercely territorial fighting off larger species that venture too close.

FACTSHEET


2000+
Species

35
Countries

14+
BirdLife Partners

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