Archivos de Diario para mayo 2023

01 de mayo de 2023

Last Day!

Here it is, Monday morning, May 1st, the last day of the 2023 Western Mass City Nature Challenge. We hope you had fun! It was lovely to meet some of you over the last three days; maybe we’ll see some of you today.

We’ll be back tonight with the initial wrap-up, but first, here are today’s activities:

Bioblitz at Quabbin Watershed, New Salem
Monday, May 1, 2023; 1PM – 3PM; Gate 29, Rt. 202 and Elm St., New Salem

Join Charley Eiseman and Lynn Harper for an easy stroll through woods and fields, past vernal pools and powerlines, to the northern shores of Quabbin Reservoir. Charley is a freelance naturalist based in western Massachusetts and the co-author, with Noah Charney, of the fascinating Tracks & Sign of Insects and Other Invertebrates; Lynn is a conservation planner, retired from the Massachusetts Natural Heritage & Endangered Species Program. Space is limited to 24 participants. Please email Lynn at harperlynn@msn.com to register for this event.

Bioblitz at Alderbrook Meadows Wildlife Sanctuary
Monday, May 1, 2023; 6PM – 7PM; 839 Millers Falls Rd. (Route 63), Northfield

Join Mount Grace Land Conservation Trust for our third City Nature Challenge event! Meet May Grzybowski, Mount Grace’s TerraCorps Land Conservation Steward, for a bioblitz at our accessible Alderbrook Meadows Wildlife Sanctuary Trail. May has worked in environmental education at Nature’s Classroom and is passionate about citizen science! All ages are welcome to this event! We’ll be walking the short trail which leads to a beaver pond and we will be trying to observe as many different plants and animals as we can! At Mount Grace we are using iNaturalist to learn more about the land we conserve and keep a record of the natural history of our forests. To register, please e-mail May Gryzbowski at grzybowski@mountgrace.org . Participants should download the iNaturalist app to their phones before arriving at the event or be ready to share a device with others. Adults with kids can also download the kid-friendly app Seek.

---Lynn Harper and Melanie Radik, co-organizers

Publicado el 01 de mayo de 2023 a las 11:02 AM por lynnharper lynnharper | 0 comentarios | Deja un comentario

Initial Numbers and Thank You!

Whew! The four days of the Western Mass City Nature Challenge are almost finished (although you have till midnight tonight, if you have any energy left). Thank you all so much for hiking with us or by yourselves, making thousands of observations on iNaturalist. We hope you had fun and appreciate even more the wonderful biodiversity of our region.

We particularly want to thank our field trip leaders: Charley Eiseman (@ceiseman), Karro Frost (@karro_frost), and May Gryzbowski (@maygrz). Thank you!!

Here’s where the numbers stand as of 7 PM May 1st:

  • 2,736 observations
  • 744 species
  • 200 observers
  • 202 identifiers

Wow!!! And there’s more to come: remember, you have through Sunday, May 7th, to upload your observations and help confirm the observations of others. We’ll be back tomorrow with another post to help you with that process. In fact, there are three workshops tomorrow to help with making identifications:

Wildlife Species Identification with iNaturalist - VIRTUAL
Tuesday, May 2, 2023; 10-11 AM

This workshop takes place entirely online over Zoom. We'll get to know the built-in iNaturalist tools for species identification, as well as the rich online and print resources available at UMass for field guides and species ID tools. Similar guides may be available at your local library. You'll leave the workshop having contributed to at least one species ID. A two-screen setup is strongly recommended, to have Zoom open in one screen and your own iNaturalist account open in the other with the web interface, but it is not required. This workshop will be recorded and posted openly on the web. Registering indicates assent to be in a recorded session. To sign up, follow the link to the event page and register with your name and email. You will be sent the Zoom link.

Wildlife Species Identification with iNaturalist
Tuesday, May 2, 2023: 4-5 PM; Science and Engineering Library in the Lederle Graduate Research Center, UMass, Amherst

This in-person workshop takes place in the Learning Studio of the Science and Engineering Library. We'll get to know the built-in iNaturalist tools for species identification, as well as the rich online and print resources available at UMass for field guides and species ID tools. Similar guides may be available at your local library. You'll leave the workshop having contributed to at least one species ID. To sign up, follow the link to the event page and register with your name and email.

Wildlife Species Identification with iNaturalist
Tuesday, May 2, 7-9 PM, Millers River Environmental Center, 100 Main St., Athol

Join us in-person at the Millers River Environmental Center as we add identifications to the CNC observations on iNaturalist. Bring your laptop (if that’s convenient, but it’s not necessary) and your field guides. We’ll learn how identifications work on iNaturalist, puzzle through the difficult species together, and tell stories about what we saw. Everyone is welcome; no registration is necessary.

On Monday, May 8th, the global City Nature Challenge staff will publish a summary of the official results for all the cities and regions taking part; we’ll certainly let you know how we did. In the meantime, take a look at the world-wide summary CNC project on iNaturalist and marvel at the number of species, observers, and observations.

---Lynn Harper and Melanie Radik, co-organizers

Publicado el 01 de mayo de 2023 a las 10:57 PM por lynnharper lynnharper | 0 comentarios | Deja un comentario

02 de mayo de 2023

No Rest for the Weary

Today’s the start of the six-day upload and identification period for the City Nature Challenge, but at least you get to put your feet up for this! Here are some reminders for this process.

Step One
Upload all your own observations. Check your iNaturalist app and make sure all your observations uploaded properly. If you use a separate camera, get all those observations uploaded. Remember you can make Casual observations as long as they have a date and place, so if you didn’t get a chance to make an observation for that moose you saw from Rt. 2 when there was no place to stop, now’s the time.

Step Two
Make sure all of your own observations have an initial identification. Sometimes with the iNat app, the automatic uploading glitches a bit and doesn’t translate the ID you gave into the official ID in the iNat observation. Here’s a URL to see if any of your Needs ID or Casual observations are Unknowns and missing an ID entirely; just substitute your username for Lynn Harper’s at the end of this URL: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/identify?quality_grade=needs_id%2Ccasual&iconic_taxa=unknown&order=asc&identified=false&project_id=154296&user_id=lynnharper

(And that’s how Lynn discovered three of her Casual observations from last year were missing an ID. Oopsie.)

Step Three
Refine your own observations. Maybe you only had time to identify something as a salamander during the CNC itself; now’s your time to pull out your field guides and see what iNaturalist’s computer vision suggests. And please check your notifications in iNaturalist to see if other people have confirmed your ID or made comments.

Step Four – and this is the Important Step
Help others with their identifications. Nobody’s observations on iNaturalist get to Research Grade without at least one other person agreeing with an ID, and you can be that other person. What – you say you aren’t an expert? That’s fine; nobody is an expert in every single taxonomic group, just do what you can. Can you tell if something is a Plant or an Animal or a Fungus? Then add those IDs to Unknowns with this link. You say you’re pretty good with moths and butterflies; here’s a link for you. You love wildflowers? Here’s a link to dicots. And so on. Feel free to ask us questions about this process (and see yesterday’s journal post for a list of today’s identification workshops).

Every identification you add helps, seriously. If you run out of observations in the Western Mass City Nature Challenge, your help will be just as welcome in the Boston CNC or the Burlington, VT, CNC or even globally. And thank you!

--Lynn Harper and Melanie Radik, co-organizers

Publicado el 02 de mayo de 2023 a las 12:38 PM por lynnharper lynnharper | 0 comentarios | Deja un comentario

05 de mayo de 2023

Zoom Talk on Oak Galls Wednesday, May 10, 7PM Eastern Time

I've had great fun learning about galls over the last couple of years vis iNaturalist, largely because of Adam Kranz, @megachile. Now he's going to give a Zoom talk to my local Athol Bird and Nature Club. Here I'll quote from the club's newsletter. You all are invited!

Oaks and Wasps: Shaping Novel Organs in the Seasonal Round
Adam Kranz, via Zoom

Join us in person at the Millers River Environmental Center in Athol, MA, to watch the Zoom presentation together. Oak gall wasps take advantage of the annual flow of resources throughout an oak tree to produce beautiful and distinctive novel plant organs to feed and protect them. With an estimated 1000 species in North America, each producing two different galls per year, this symbiosis is one of the most engrossing puzzles in nature. Adam Kranz would like to equip you to help him put it together.

Adam Kranz is one of the co-founders of www.Gallformers.org an online database for amateur and academic naturalists studying plant galls in North America. He lives in Austin, TX.

You are invited to a Zoom webinar.

When: May 10, 2023 07:00 PM Eastern Time (US and Canada)

Topic: Oaks and Wasps: Shaping Novel Organs in the Seasonal Round

Register in advance for this webinar: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_eHhPGrokR4mspgwFJ7-jcQ

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar.

Publicado el 05 de mayo de 2023 a las 12:56 PM por lynnharper lynnharper | 0 comentarios | Deja un comentario

Keep On Identifying!

This is just a reminder that we have through Sunday, May 7th, to finish uploading observations and make identifications. On Monday morning, May 8th, 9 AM our time, the City Nature Challenge will declare our final numbers and let us know later that day.

We are actually doing great so far! At the moment, we have 2,944 observations of 804 species made by 218 observers. There have been 243 identifiers working on all the observations – thank you so much! Tom Norton, @tsn, has contributed an astounding 882 identifications for others – thank you, Tom!

But there are still 1,107 observations that need identifying. Not all of these can be identified to species, however. A fuzzy photo of a tiny spider from 5 feet away will likely never make Research Grade, but if two people agree that it’s a spider and one person marks it “as good as can be” in the Data Quality Assessment, the observation will move out of Needs ID and become Casual. Casual observations still count for the CNC and are still available for spider experts to look at in the future, so you may want to mark some of your own observations “as good as can be” to help reduce the Needs ID pile.

And since we are nearing the end of the Challenge, it’s time to ask you what changes you’d like to see for next year. We can all hope for a warmer, sunnier weekend next year, but guaranteeing that is beyond our control. But are there more or different kinds of field trips you’d like to attend, or do you prefer to go out on your own? Did you find the journal posts helpful? Many CNC cities and regions involve high school and college students; can you suggest some ways we could make that happen? (Email notifications didn’t garner much response.) Should Berkshire County be spun off into its own CNC region, or should we take over western Worcester County, or should we just stay the same? What else can we do to involve more people? Thanks for any responses you can give!

---Lynn Harper and Melanie Radik, co-organizers

Publicado el 05 de mayo de 2023 a las 01:33 PM por lynnharper lynnharper | 0 comentarios | Deja un comentario

08 de mayo de 2023

The Official Final Numbers

At 9AM this morning our time, the CNC staff recorded our official Western Mass City Nature Challenge numbers:

  • 2,976 observations
  • 811 species
  • 223 observers
  • 259 identifiers

Congratulations! You all did a great job in less-than-ideal weather. We predicted we’d get about 800 species this year; we exceeded that goal. We had about a thousand more observations than in 2022 – great! But we had about the same number of observers as in 2022, even though we added Berkshire County this year. Was that because of the weather? Are people spending less time hiking and observing now that the pandemic has calmed down considerably? Who knows, but we would love your suggestions for improvements for next year.

Thanks again; we hope you have a lovely summer enjoying the biodiversity of Western Massachusetts and we’ll see you again next year!

---Lynn Harper and Melanie Radik, co-organizers

Publicado el 08 de mayo de 2023 a las 10:49 PM por lynnharper lynnharper | 0 comentarios | Deja un comentario