Guild · Florida · BBS 2025 Release · 1966–2024
Aerial Insectivores In Florida
12 species in this guild. As a group they are -20%Guild trendA mean-index aggregate across the species in this group — the structural direction of the guild, with individual-species noise smoothed out.Full methodology → since 1968.
Guild SignalsNotable signalsLong-arc shifts the engine flags automatically — sustained declines or increases large enough to stand out from year-to-year noise.Full methodology →
No notable trend signals for aerial insectivores in Florida. See the full index history below.
Forecast
If the recent trend holds, Aerial insectivores in Florida is projected to stay roughly flat through 2029, near 3.3 (95% range 1.8–4.7). A 5-year backtest shows a typical error of ±11.2%, with 100% of held-out values landing inside the 95% band.
Member Species In Florida
| TrendPercent change in the route-weighted abundance index between a smoothed baseline window and the most recent one. It tracks direction, not absolute population.Full methodology → | ||
|---|---|---|
| Gray Kingbird | Tyrannidae | -96% |
| Eastern Wood-Pewee | Tyrannidae | -86% |
| Common Nighthawk | Caprimulgidae | -63% |
| Eastern Kingbird | Tyrannidae | -60% |
| Northern Rough-winged Swallow | Hirundinidae | -34% |
| Chimney Swift | Apodidae | -29% |
| Acadian Flycatcher | Tyrannidae | -22% |
| Purple Martin | Hirundinidae | -9% |
| Chuck-will's-widow | Caprimulgidae | +2% |
| Cliff Swallow | Hirundinidae | +7% |
| Great Crested Flycatcher | Tyrannidae | +58% |
| Barn Swallow | Hirundinidae | 14× |
Source: USGS North American Breeding Bird Survey, retrieved 2026-05-22.