Archivos de diario de enero 2022

01 de enero de 2022

Onward! To Wherever We're Going!

Happy New Year, everyone! Let's hope 2022 is better than 2021 and 2020.

I love to make plans. Carrying out those plans - maybe not so much, but making the plans is great fun. So, I am going to set out here some plans, goals, ideas for 2022.

First, let's note where I was this morning in terms of iNat statistics: I'm up to 23,131 observations, 44,686 identifications for others, and 2,362 species in total. Off-iNat, I made 83 reports of state-listed or uncommon plants and animals to the Massachusetts Natural Heritage Program, and one or two similar reports to Vermont's Natural Heritage. (By the way, except for rare occasions, I don't post observations of MA-listed species on iNat. Uncommon, non-listed species - yes.) I am happy with those numbers, especially because I had an absolute ball going all over the place this past year.

Now, numbers like these don't mean much in terms of appreciating the natural world or contributing to Real Science, but they are easy to track, so here are my goals for 2022: I'd like to make 10,000 more observations (so 33,131 in total). I'd like to make twice as many identifications for others as my own observations, so that's a goal of 66,262 IDs in total by the end of 2022. That means I need to make 21,576 IDs this year, or about 60 a day. (This is where carrying out my plan starts to get tricky.)

I'd like to do more moth trapping this year - moth-attracting, really, since I very rarely collect specimens. Last year, after the wash-out that was July, I hardly attracted anything to my trap, so I kind of gave up on the end of the season.

I bought a new tent in the spring of last year. Did I use it at all? No. That is going to change in 2022. Ditto the kayak I haven't paddled in at least a decade. Think of all the fun floating around in a pond, photographing aquatic plants and damselflies that alight on the boat and the occasional turtle who pokes their head up.

I want to make more day trips to other New England states and to New York, since trips farther afield are still likely to be on hold because of COVID. I went on four or five such day trips last year, and they were fun. Feel free to tell me where to go!

I'd like to begin to learn fungi. I've started by learning that slime molds are no longer part of Fungi, as they were half a century ago when I learned basic biology; now, they are part of Protozoa.

I've gotten lazy about plants. I know some, but I've stopped carrying field guides into the field and looking up, say, how to tell the ashes apart. Or the elms. Maybe I'll tackle asters or goldenrods this year. And someday, I will learn once and for all how to tell Carpinus from Ostrya (maybe). I should make a list of plants (and other species, for that matter) that I've never seen and make an effort to go find them. Green Dragon, for example.

Finally, I'd like to encourage and train other iNatters how to make IDs on other peoples' observations. Go read iNat's blog post from May of 2020 on the occasion of iNat reaching one million observers, here: https://www.inaturalist.org/blog/35758-we-ve-reached-1-000-000-observers Note especially the part where they say, "To put in perspective what a small fraction of the iNaturalist community of identifiers is, ... 51% of users have posted an observation (blue and yellow), but only 4% have made identifications for other people (yellow and pink). Nonetheless, these 107,000 identifiers have generated 53 million identifications for other people compared with 43 million observations generated by 1,265,000 observers (from now on I’m [the writer] counting all observers, not just observers of verifiable observations as I prefer to do because the data were easier to fetch, but the patterns are the same)."

To that end, I'm going to start with running an ID-a-thon for New England plants towards the end of February. Give me a couple of weeks to get organized, but after that, I'm going to make some journal posts in the project about how to make IDs - not how to tell plants apart, but walking the reader through the mechanics of the clicks and such that make up an ID. Feel free at any point to ask me questions, even questions you think are stupid questions, because, trust me, it was a bit of a learning curve for me, too.

And I plan on having fun. Going places I've never been before. Maybe meeting - safely, in the field, no huddling over field guides - other iNatters. Eating more ice cream than I should. Finding weird galls and leafminers. Watching eagles and Somatochloras soar overhead; ditto for fish and turtles under my kayak. It'll be grand. I hope to see you out there!

Publicado el enero 1, 2022 08:56 TARDE por lynnharper lynnharper | 5 comentarios | Deja un comentario

30 de enero de 2022

Welcome!

Welcome to the 2022 ID-a-thon for New England plants! This is a 48-hour period in which we try to add identifications to as many “Needs ID” plant observations in New England as we possibly can. The project will run from 7 PM Friday, Feb. 25, 2022, to 7 PM Sunday, Feb. 27, 2022. You don’t have to be an expert botanist to participate (hint: I am definitely NOT an expert botanist!).

A second – but just as important! – goal is help more iNat observers to become more comfortable with making IDs, because as of this writing there are almost 70,000 observers of New England plants in iNat, but only a little over 12,000 identifiers. So, only about 17% of New England plant observers have made any IDs on observations other than their own.

To help focus this project a little, I’ve chosen to focus on Needs ID plant observations that are already at species level. Just before the project starts, I’ll make a journal post with a link to those observations. In the weeks before the project, I’ll make some journal posts about how I make IDs (not how to ID plants, but the steps I take), online resources that are helpful, and some hints about how to be efficient in your IDs.

The only observations you should add to this project are of two types: really cool plants you think everyone would like to see, and observations where you want a little assistance making the ID. Please keep an eye on the project observations during (and after) the ID-a-thon, so you can help out other participants when you can.

Please feel free to ask me any questions at any time, whether by responding to a journal post or by sending me a private message.

Here I’m going to invite a number of iNatters who I think might be interested in this project (but feel free to not join). And of course, everyone is free to join, whether invited or not.

@agave6_tomwalker, @allisonbf, @akilee, @amandammvt, @apgarm, @bryanconnolly, @btk, @cbuelow45, @cgbb2004, @charlie, @choess, @davidenrique, @deparia1950, @donlubin, @erikamitchell, @jackcadwell, @julie_richburg1, @karro_frost, @mcharpentier, @mikeakresh, @mtjones, @nick2524, @pat_huckery_masswildlife, @patswain, @peakaytea, @slamonde, @taluswalker, @tarpinian, @thomashulsey, @trscavo, @tsn

Publicado el enero 30, 2022 06:24 TARDE por lynnharper lynnharper | 9 comentarios | Deja un comentario