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  • Section: Biodiversity Science project
  1. Biodiversity Science project: Geo-Wiki Project

    The Geo-Wiki Project is a citizen science network that hopes to improve the overall quality of land use and land cover maps across the globe. They host a variety of projects, all of which use their online Google Earth Application to enlist citizen scientists to improve spatial data. By comparing global land use and land cover data to the aerial photography that appears in Google Earth, you can help improve the validity of important data that is being used to solve important global...

  2. Biodiversity Science project: Where's Lori?

    Where's Lori? is a citizen science projects focused on rainbow lorikeets. Participants in Victoria will upload upload picture of rainbow lorikeets and/or their nesting hollows to a google form for a chance to win a range of prizes.

  3. Biodiversity Science project: South American Wildlands and Biodiversity

    South American Wildlands and Biodiversity needs volunteers to help identify, describe, and protect wildland complexes and roadless areas in South America. Volunteers will use Google Earth to identify and map existing roads in areas of Argentina, Chile, and Bolivia. Volunteers are needed who have access to Google Earth and are comfortable working on computers...

  4. Biodiversity Science project: nQuire-it

    nQuire-it is a platform to join, create, and share citizen science missions with people around the world. There are three kinds of missions: Spot-it allows people to spot and share things around us; Sense-it links to the Android Sense-it app (available on Google Play) to capture data from any mobile device sensor; Win-it missions set science challenges.

  5. Biodiversity Science project: Darwin for a Day

    Darwin for a Day is a web application that allows you to explore the Galapagos Islands through Google Street View and document its unique plants and animals. When you see an animal or plant you’d like to catalogue, you can describe it by creating an observation. You can just enter your best guess at what it is (i.e...

  6. Biodiversity Science project: Burnside Urban Foresters

    We will provide learning workshops about urban trees and habitat, and opportunities for residents to actively participate in projects about the trees, habitat and wildlife in the City of Burnside in South Australia. Volunteer registration and training must be completed before data collection is undertaken. Register your interest here: http://bit...

  7. Biodiversity Science project: Price personalization tool

    The Price Comparison Tool by Volunteer Science enables you to see how corporations may be changing the prices you see based on factors like your browser cookies and user agent. Pages you visit on Google Flights, Amazon, Priceline.com, and The Home Depot (with more sites coming soon!) will be loaded on a remote server, and the server's prices will be loaded seamlessly into your page so that you can compare them...

  8. Biodiversity Science project: BC Cetacean Sightings Network

    Twenty-three species of cetaceans and sea turtles have been recorded in the waters of British Columbia, Canada. Many of these populations are 'at-risk' and under-studied. The B.C. Cetacean Sightings Network (BCCSN) collects sightings of cetaceans and sea turtles in the waters surrounding British Columbia, Canada using a network of citizen scientist observers...

  9. Biodiversity Science project: EpiCollect

    EpiCollect is a mobile phone application that allows professional and citizen scientists to gather, submit, and access research data through a central web database. The software is powered by Google Maps and Android, Google's open-source operating system. EpiCollect was designed for epidemiological and ecological studies but has potential for a number of other fields, including economics, public health, and resource allocation...

  10. Biodiversity Science project: Bees and EZ Water

    Does the Forth Phase of Water (Exclusion Zone aka EZ water as researched by Dr. Gerald Pollack and many others over the last few decades) provide the best water for honey production and does its properties effect/affect the properties of honey production. Do certain watering conditions invite more bees to water and do they seek out the EZ layer of water at the watering site. Looking to build a collection of photos that show bees (all species) watering...