The form's checklist includes a Google mapping locator, allowing users to pinpoint where the sighting occurred and what the kite was doing at the time.
Citizen sightings of the bird a decade ago helped form the boundaries of the Waccamaw National Wildlife Refuge near Georgetown.
The 18,000 acres of managed refuge is one of the state's most productive swallow-tailed kite nesting sites in the state.
Future sightings could be used to identify which parcels of the refuge's 54,000-acre acquisition area to preserve next.
Craig Sasser, refuge manager, said they are using current sightings to help design a road through the refuge, hoping to keep it from affecting nest sites.
Those citizen reports make up for the staff Sasser doesn't have.
Sasser said the birds are hard to locate and often disappear once they see signs of man.
Whitehead said scientists would have to spend hours upon hours and thousands of dollars compiling the information that citizens have.
Locating the nests, made from Spanish moss in treetops, can take a helicopter flight unless someone has seen the birds from the ground first.
Tera Baird, a College of Charleston student studying swallow-tailed kites for a Master of Science degree in environmental studies, uses the citizen database to find places where kites feed, hoping to gather data that one day will tell people how to best manage the land for kite conservation.
Without the database, Baird said, she wouldn't know where to begin.
Reports also have offered new information to those who study them.
One tells of a kite snatching a bat from a tree and eating it.
"That's ... information new to science," Whitehead said, "that swallow-tailed kites feed on mammals."
Reach Jessica Johnson at 937-5921
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