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During the City Nature Challenge, participants use the free app iNaturalist to document wildlife. Kathryn Whitney © 2018 California Academy of Sciences
Species identifications are verified by iNaturalist's online community of experts. © California Academy of Sciences
Participants observed the endangered San Francisco garter snake, found only in the Bay Area, during the 2018 City Nature Challenge. © 2018 Amy Patten
Fields of whispering bells were observed in the region of the North Bay Fires during the 2018 City Nature Challenge. © 2018 Kim Wagner
Whispering bells are considered "fire followers" and flourish in post-burn areas. © 2018 Kim Wagner

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Citizen scientists across the globe compete in City Nature Challenge April 26 – 29, 2019

The wildly successful City Nature Challenge returns this month!

SAN FRANCISCO (April 11, 2019) – The wildly successful City Nature Challenge returns this month! An estimated 25,000 citizen scientists in over 150 cities around the globe are expected to document the nature in their neighborhoods. After launching the first-ever City Nature Challenge in 2016, the California Academy of Sciences and the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County have now expanded the citizen science initiative to take place on six continents. Any photos of wild plants or animals taken during the Challenge can be uploaded to the free mobile app iNaturalist where an online community confirms species identifications. The observations gathered during neighborhood surveys become open-source data that help scientists inform resource management and detect patterns in global change.

The competition begins April 26 at 12:01 am in each time zone and runs through April 29, 11:59 pm. People of all ages and science backgrounds can participate by joining a community event in their metro area or by submitting their own pictures of wildlife on iNaturalist, an online platform powered by the California Academy of Sciences and National Geographic. Observations will be tallied (in friendly competition) and results announced on May 6.

Last year, San Francisco won the competition across all three categories: most observations, most species observed, and most participants. On April 18, Bay Area participants can attend a NightLife event at the Academy to learn more about regional wildlife, get hands-on experience using iNaturalist, hear incredible stories about human-nature interactions, and meet organizations around the Bay Area that are holding events for the City Nature Challenge! (See the full list of Bay Area events here.)

“Going into our fourth year as co-organizers of the City Nature Challenge, we continue to be blown away by the excitement for this event around the world,” says Alison Young, co-director of Citizen Science at the Academy. “As more cities join the Challenge, we’re building a global community of people interested in nature and curious about what lives around them, while simultaneously gathering invaluable data for addressing questions in urban ecology and global change.”

As cities become more crowded, understanding how human, animal, and plant residents all coexist is a crucial part of envisioning a sustainable future. But there are formidable challenges to acquiring large pools of data about changing cityscapes. Coordinated citizen science efforts like the City Nature Challenge help scientists and city planners track species movements and make more meaningful analyses of shifting urban biodiversity.

Last year’s four-day City Nature Challenge took place across 68 cities and participants added more than 400,000 observations of nature to iNaturalist. Although a competition, participating institutions share the goal of building community around nature discovery and observation.

For both budding and veteran citizen scientists, participating couldn’t be easier:

  1. Find wildlife. It can be any wild plant, animal, fungi, slime mold, or any other evidence of life (scat, fur, tracks, shells, carcasses!) found in your participating city.

  2. Take pictures of what you find using iNaturalist or your city’s chosen platform.

  3. Learn more as your observations get identified!

During the 2018 City Nature Challenge, an observation of a hammerhead worm in the San Francisco Bay Area marked the first-ever recording of this species, which is native to Asia, in the U.S. In central Texas, observations were gathered of the bracted twistflower—a candidate for federal protection—blooming in deep purple hues across its only known home in the Edwards Plateau. In Hong Kong, observations of an incense tree that inspired the city’s name (Hong Kong translates to “scented harbor”) helped document how the once-abundant tree has declined across its native range. And the observation of an endangered songbird flitting through swamps outside of Bogotá, Colombia renewed hope for the future of this rare bird. Many other endangered, endemic, or data deficient species were recorded during the City Nature Challenge.

See participating cities and partner organizations.

Social Media: #CityNatureChallenge