using inaturalist for engagement and data collection

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Using for engagement and data collection Presentation to the District of Columbia Department of Energy & Environment By Carrie E. Seltzer, Ph.D. Program Manager of National Geographic’s Great Nature Project October 15, 2015

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Page 1: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

Using for engagement and data collection

Presentation to the District of Columbia Department of Energy & Environment

By Carrie E. Seltzer, Ph.D.Program Manager of National Geographic’s Great Nature

ProjectOctober 15, 2015

Page 2: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

How many species live in DC?

• “The forests, waters, meadows, and wetlands in the District provide habitat for approximately 240 species of birds, 78 fish, 29 mammals, 21 reptiles, 19 amphibians, and thousands of invertebrates.”

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Page 3: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

iNaturalist makes it easy for people to share what they see

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Page 4: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

Elements of an observation

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

What? Who? When?

Where?

Details?

Community ID

Evidence (photo or sound)

Page 5: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

iNaturalist has an underlying taxonomy

• Observations should somehow be attached to the tree of life (i.e. not rocks, water, trash, etc.)

• Observations can be attached at any taxonomic level

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Page 6: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

What if you don’t know what you saw?

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Page 7: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

Start with what you know

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Page 8: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

IDs should get progressively finer

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Page 9: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

What if you see a protected species?

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Page 10: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

What happens with the data?

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Page 11: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

Who else is using this?

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Page 12: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

Who else is using this?

• Texas

• Vermont

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Page 13: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

Who else is using this?

• Texas

• Vermont

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Page 14: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

Texas Nature Trackers Program

Naturalist Community

Research &

Conservation

Data

1. Expertise2. Data Products3. Legitimacy

Data

1. Achievement2. Knowledge3. Impact

Twin Goals:- Grow the naturalist community - Inform conservation decisions

Slide from Cullen Hanks, Texas Parks & Wildlife Dept.

Page 15: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

Species of Greatest Conservation Need

• 3,300+ observations

• >20% of all HoTX obs

• 93% of SGCN species

Observed by Srhein on May 16th 2015 in Smith County, iNat # 1596232

Slide from Cullen Hanks, Texas Parks & Wildlife Dept.

Page 16: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

You’ve got a running start!

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

2,876 observations (~16 per sq km)

Page 17: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

Export Existing Data

• Filter data and select relevant fields to export data as .csv or .kml (for Google Earth)

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Page 18: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

How can DC use this?

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Page 19: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

Define a location for your project

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Page 20: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

Projects can have rules and extra fields

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Page 21: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

Create Species Guides

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Page 22: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

Communicate with participants

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Page 23: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

Project Participation Stats

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Page 24: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

Tap into local experts here in DC

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Page 25: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

Upcoming BioBlitz

• May 20-21, 2016

• Surveys at:– Constitution Gardens

– Rock Creek Park

– Fort Circle Parks

– GW Parkway (incl. Roosevelt Island)

– C&O Canal

• Target: 10,000 attendees

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Page 26: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

What CAN’T you do with iNaturalist?

• Abiotic recording/monitoring (water quality, precipitation, temperature, air quality, etc.)

• Recording/mapping entire plant communities

• Absence (iNat is best for presence-only)

• Difficult to record metadata around sampling effort

• Not a GIS itself, but you can use the data in another GIS.

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Page 27: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

What’s National Geographic’s involvement?

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Page 28: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

Other possible local partners

• Biophilic DC

• Audubon

• Rock Creek Conservancy

• Anacostia Watershed Society

• City Wildlife

• DC Master Naturalists

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Page 29: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

Next Steps for Citizen Science

• iNaturalist can be one element of citizen science to inform DC’s Wildlife Action Plan.

• Useful way to grow participant pool for projects with more complex protocols.

• Other resources/projects include:

– eBird (checklists allow for explicit/inferred absence)

– eMammal (camera trapping)

– FrogWatch (based on calls)

– Feral/outdoor cat monitoring/GPS tracking

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Page 30: Using iNaturalist for engagement and data collection

Note for re-using this presentation

• Please do! Just credit me (CC BY 4.0)

• Most of the images on the slides are just screen captures from iNaturalist.

• Some of them are composites I created in Google Drawings. Email me at [email protected] to get access to these if you want to edit them (or use the concept to recreate your own).

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY