Scott and Cobirds,
Here is an informed response I received from Ken Ostermiller, volunteer eBird hotspot reviewer for Ohio. I am totally ignorant of the pros and cons of portals, so I asked Ken what value they might hold.
Ken is an experienced and savvy eBirder and has some information about very recent (October 7) news about eBird setting up a Colorado portal at a cost of:
FREE.
Ken is very generous with time devoted to helping birders with things like this. I am not sure who would take the time to set up a portal,
which seems to be a huge task.
I am a huge fan of CObirds and the CFO County Listing website and feel that those excellent resources meet the needs of Colorado birders and visitors.
But Scott describes how a state portal can do other tasks, so this is just FYI.
from Ken Ostermiller:
<<Hi Joe
I looked into setting up a portal for Ohio and found that eBird needed partners to contribute significant funding to pay for the web development of such a portal -- I don't remember the exact amount but it was over $10,000. I didn't see any way that would happen!
Others heard about what I had done in Ohio and I have helped set up similar sites in Missouri, South Dakota, and New Hampshire.
Unfortunately, the wiki service we have been using, Wikispaces, has recently discontinued offering free wikis for non-educational use. They will be shutting down the free wikis on November 15. That prompted me to discuss with Chris Wood whether we could get Cornell to set up a free wiki based on their higher education connection. Just today they got one set up and I am in the process of moving three states there -- Missouri, Ohio, and South Dakota. There is room for more states in the wiki, so if someone in Colorado wants to set up a section on Colorado, we could do that.
The Ohio web site is getting used by Ohio birders. I'm getting 300-400 unique visitors each day on the site. It is good for tourism as well as birders.
Probably more than you wanted to know!
>>
Joe Roller,
Denver