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This yellow-crowned night heron was photographed in Lubbock, Texas. © Joe Manthey
Asian weaver ants dismember the queen of a rival colony in Thailand. © Pipat Soisook
This short-tailed weasel in Utah was one of 1,870,000 observations recorded in this year's Challenge. © Adam Olsen
These fruiting bodies of a carnival candy slime mold were spotted in the Santa Cruz Mountains. © Ryan Pearson
The western fence lizard was the most observed species in Los Angeles County. © Donna Pomeroy
This giant electric ray—which displays either albinism or leucism—was seen off the coast of Mexico's Socorro Island. © Hector Hernandez

Press Center

City Nature Challenge records over 1,870,000 wildlife observations in a single weekend

More than 66,300 community scientists participate in the Challenge's eighth year.

SAN FRANCISCO, CA (May 8, 2023) — In its eighth year, the annual City Nature Challenge—one of the world’s largest community science events—has surpassed 1,870,000 wildlife observations for another record-breaking year! Over the four-day event held last weekend, more than 66,300 people across six continents participated however they could—from attending local wildlife surveys to finding the species in their own homes—to document the wondrous diversity of wild plants, animals, and fungi that share our planet using the free mobile app iNaturalist. From observations of critically endangered and elusive species to sightings of species outside of their known ranges, the City Nature Challenge underscores the power of community science in tracking real-time changes in our planet’s biodiversity—especially in urban areas.

Started in 2016 by the California Academy of Sciences and the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County as a friendly competition between San Francisco and Los Angeles metro areas, the Challenge has expanded to over 450 cities around the world. This year’s Challenge broke previous observation records, tallying over 1,870,000 observations and recording over 57,200 species worldwide—including more than 2,500 rare, endangered, or threatened species. The highest number of observations were tallied in La Paz, Bolivia, where over 3,000 participants made more than 126,400 observations during the Challenge weekend! This year’s Challenge was made possible by the hundreds of individuals and partner organizations around the globe who empowered their respective communities to safely explore nature in their neighborhoods.

“I'm always excited to see new cities, especially those in new countries, join in the City Nature Challenge,” says Alison Young, co-Director of Community Science at the Academy and co-founder of the Challenge. “This year, we were thrilled to welcome participants from Baku in Azerbaijan, Maputo in Mozambique, Nairobi in Kenya, as well as several cities in Eswatini, India, Rwanda, and Thailand.”

See below for highlights for this year’s City Nature Challenge.

San Francisco Bay Area by the numbers

San Francisco Bay Area highlights

Highlights from around the Bay Area include an endangered California tiger salamander, two sunbathing western fence lizards, a vulnerable and endemic wild onion, fruiting bodies of cotton candy-like slime mold, a male valley carpenter bee in mid-flight, a pair of Steller sea lions, a watchful great horned owl in San Francisco’s Presidio, an American beaver in the South Bay, and a California newt carefully navigating the forest floor.

World by the numbers

World highlights

Highlights from around the U.S. and the world include an inquisitive yellow-crowned night heron in Texas, a giant electric ray with albinism or leucism near Mexico’s Socorro Island, an Indo-Pacific humpback dolphin off the coast Hong Kong, a playful pair of red fox pups in England, a short-tailed weasel after a successful hunt in Utah, Asian weaver ants dismembering the queen of a rival colony in Thailand, a carefree southern sea otter in California’s Monterey Bay, a dazzling sea slug in New Zealand, a critically endangered buchu plant in South Africa, a desert-dwelling coast patchnose snake in Orange County, and a portly Pacific horned frog in Ecuador.

For Young, the Challenge is not only a source of critical biodiversity data but an opportunity for people to connect with nature and each other. “Slowing down and really seeing how many different species are around you no matter where you are—maybe even finding something you had no idea lived around you—helps to build a deeper appreciation for the natural world.”