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International birding app now available in Marathi and Malayalam languages

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Birders across Maharashtra and Kerala can read the description of 300 bird species found in the respective States in their local language, says Bird Count India

Birders across Maharashtra and Kerala can read the description of 300 bird species found in the respective States in their local language, says Bird Count India
| Photo Credit: File photo

Now, birders across Maharashtra and Kerala can read the description of 300 bird species found in the respective States in their local language, according to Bird Count India, which has launched two Indian languages in the Merlin bird identification app.

“India is a linguistically diverse country, and birdwatchers in India speak so many languages. Still, our most popular bird identification books and websites in India are in English and targeted towards a small section of the public. In an effort to bridge this gap, Bird Count India has launched two Indian languages in the Merlin bird identification app,” a release stated.

Cornell University in the U.S. develops the Merlin app; they enable regional partners like Bird Count India to translate the bird identification material into any language of their choice.

In more languages

“Marathi and Malayalam are just the beginning of our translation project. We plan to partner with more NGOs in all States to launch bird identification descriptions in every regional language,” says Praveen J., Bird Count India.

Merlin app already supports the regional language names of birds in six other South Asian languages — Assamese, Bengali, Gujarati, Hindi, Odia, and Telugu.

“However, names themselves are not sufficient as the description of each bird is still in English. The larger vision is to make the best material for bird-watchers in every Indian language — freely accessible at the fingertips of every user through their smartphones. The same descriptions are also available on the website of eBird and displayed based on the language preference of the user,” the release added.

“Language should never become a barrier for our people to gain knowledge. With greater knowledge comes greater responsibility for conservation. I look forward to the launch of the Hindi text of Merlin bird identification,” said Hakimuddin Saify, who co-maintains Hindi names of birds in Merlin.

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