Citizen Science

Citizen Science

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wildlife Courtesy of Larry Greenemeier

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Wildlife Sightings

Wildlife Sightings offers nature enthusiasts a way of contributing information and photos of wildlife sightings to a global public citizen science database. One of the project's goals is to lower the technical barriers and costs for organizations to set up and run local citizen science projects.

Project Details

  • PRINCIPAL SCIENTIST: Paul Lindgreen
  • SCIENTIST AFFILIATION: Wildlife Sightings
  • DATES: Ongoing
  • PROJECT TYPE: Observation
  • COST: Free
  • GRADE LEVEL: All Ages
  • TIME COMMITMENT: Variable
  • HOW TO JOIN:

    To submit a wildlife or plant sighting register an account then login. You may then submit sightings (name of the wildlife or plant, date sighted and location) and contribute to the community database.

See more projects in FreeObservationAll Ages.

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  1. 1. junponline 05:37 PM 9/18/12

    We've recently added free tools for educators and non-profit groups to run their own citizen science projects. Administrators can manage multiple users or students, all under one central account. (we've changed our domain name to WildlifeSightings.net too fyi)

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What is Citizen Science?

Research often involves teams of scientists collaborating across continents. Now, using the power of the Internet, non-specialists are participating, too. Citizen Science falls into many categories. A pioneering project was SETI@Home, which has harnessed the idle computing time of millions of participants in the search for extraterrestrial life. Citizen scientists also act as volunteer classifiers of heavenly objects, such as in Galaxy Zoo. They make observations of the natural world, as in The Great Sunflower Project. And they even solve puzzles to design proteins, such as FoldIt. We'll add projects regularly—and please tell us about others you like as well.

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