How and why to use iNaturalist for a BioBlitz

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Using for data collection at a BioBlitz Presentation to the U.S. Forest Service By Carrie E. Seltzer, Ph.D. Program Manager National Geographic Society

Transcript of How and why to use iNaturalist for a BioBlitz

Page 1: How and why to use iNaturalist for a BioBlitz

Using for data collection at a BioBlitz

Presentation to the U.S. Forest ServiceBy Carrie E. Seltzer, Ph.D.

Program Manager National Geographic Society

Page 2: How and why to use iNaturalist for a BioBlitz

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

iNaturalist makes it easy for people to share what they see

Page 3: How and why to use iNaturalist for a BioBlitz

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Elements of an observationWhat? Who? When?

Where?

Details?

Community ID

Evidence (photo or sound)

Page 4: How and why to use iNaturalist for a BioBlitz

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

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

Page 5: How and why to use iNaturalist for a BioBlitz

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Start with what you know

Page 6: How and why to use iNaturalist for a BioBlitz

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Crowd source species IDs

Page 7: How and why to use iNaturalist for a BioBlitz

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Why it’s great for BioBlitzes

Page 8: How and why to use iNaturalist for a BioBlitz

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Define a location for your project

Page 9: How and why to use iNaturalist for a BioBlitz

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Automatically protect sensitive species

Page 10: How and why to use iNaturalist for a BioBlitz

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Create Species Guides

Page 11: How and why to use iNaturalist for a BioBlitz

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Communicate with participants

Page 12: How and why to use iNaturalist for a BioBlitz

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

Export Data

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

Page 13: How and why to use iNaturalist for a BioBlitz

C.E. Seltzer, National Geographic. CC BY

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.