Ask Alex Harper why he loves to go birding, and he鈥檒l start at the very beginning of the story.
鈥淢y parents tell me that birdie was my first word. I don't remember. I was probably one at the time. But that's what they tell me,鈥 he said.
Harper lives in Las Vegas, where he works for the Red Rock Audubon Society roaming the Mojave desert in search of birds. But he grew up amid the sawgrass prairies and mangrove forest of the South Florida Everglades, begging his parents to take him birding with his grandfather鈥檚 binoculars.
He identified his first bird when he was four: an ornament-size warbler called the common yellowthroat.
鈥淚 remember going into a bird book and going through all the different plates and the illustrations and identifying this male common yellowthroat,鈥 he said.
This month and January, Harper will be among the thousands of birders in North and South America, the Bahamas and other parts of the world participating in .
The pandemic briefly slowed the count beginning in 2020, just after Harper took part in the South Florida counts while home visiting his parents for the holidays. But last year, participation rebounded with a vengeance, with more than 75,000 counters, the highest in a single season.
One of the more unusual 鈥 and popular 鈥 bird counting spots in South Florida is Dump Marsh.
The marsh sits in the shadow of Miami-Dade County鈥檚 south landfill, near the Black Point Marina. Despite the 300-acre landfill, the football field-sized marsh has become a hotspot for bird watchers with its wide array of birds, from the tiny warblers Harper still loves, to owls, hawks, turkey vultures 鈥 of course 鈥 and a chorus of songbirds.
The bird count started on Christmas day in 1900 amid growing concerns that the planet鈥檚 birds were vanishing. The planet鈥檚 last passenger pigeon died 14 years later.
While environmental protections and pollution laws have helped since, birds have continued to dwindle.
In 2019, scientists using data from the bird counts and the North American Breeding Survey had vanished since the 1970s. An alarming discovery was the unexpected steep declines in common birds, like black birds and sparrows, suggesting a profound loss of habitat.
The bird counts, organized around 15 mile wide circles, now number in the thousands, from as far north as the Canadian arctic to Tierra del Fuego. This year鈥檚 count runs through Jan. 5.
To find a count in South Florida, visit .