If he’s your man why is he confirming my species identification as research grade on iNaturalist
More pictures I have taken recently. I wish there were more ciliate enjoyers on this website.
1st image (top-left to right): Loxophyllum meleagris, colpidium colpoda, bursaria, haptorid (possibly enchelyodon), nassulid, arcellinid, euglena viridis, stentor coeruleus, metacineta mystacina
2nd image: Spathidiid, cyphoderia, amphileptus, nassulid, stentor roeselii, turaniella vitrea, homalozoon vermiculare, frontonia, amphileptus procerus
Took these in Big Sur California.
Here is what iNaturalist has to say:
Love this page
Purple edged bonnet, Mycena purpureofusca
every time i post a mushroom on inaturalist someone wants to id it as “fungi including lichens,” why even suggest an identification at that point? if someone posts a plant you don’t recognize are you gonna ‘identify’ it as a member of the plant kingdom? 😤
WHY IS THE THIRD ONE ME BUT FOR FLOWERS AND PLANTS
I DIDN’T ASK TO BE CALLED OUT ON A WEDNESDAY
I still can’t believe I saw someone try and put fucking pine down for a bald cypress though, I wanted to throw hands. NOT EVEN IN THE SAME GENUS BRO.
does iNaturalist really help research? Or it's just for fun and to help U feel love for the wildlife around U?
Yep! Research Grade observations are called that for a reason, they be and are used by plenty of researchers! There have been papers written on iNaturalist data, species have been described via iNaturalist, and so on. I personally have collected and sent specimens to multiple researchers who have contacted me because of my iNaturalist observations even
Though it is also fun :>
the ant people are the only ones on inaturalist that consistently use the "favorites" button. unfortunately the rest of us don't know their secrets so there will be like, dozens of faves on a picture of an ant and i am like why is the ant so special. teach us to see the beauty of the ant.
My beloveds... a whole row of some of my favorite native inverts and, of course, robins.
iNaturalist reblog game: post your top 5 most observed species. i'll go first
if you do not live in the uk or north america it is your legal obligation to download inaturalist and start uploading. please everyone who uses it is in north america or the uk we need obs that arent here
[If you haven’t joined iNaturalist, you should! It’s a great way to learn about the wildlife around you and contribute to citizen science]
This guide will be consistently updated as I write more posts/receive more questions. This is intended to be a basic jumping off point, with some links to more detailed guides(when I write them). If there is something you would like a more in-depth answer on, feel free to contact me directly!
Nope! iNaturalist is for everybody, and is in fact founded on the principle that you do not need to be a professional researcher in order to contribute to science
Also no. You will see a lot of people on iNaturalist doing this, but it isn’t required. Do as much as you are comfortable with
[More in-depth guide TBA]
In order for an observation to be eligible to become Research Grade, it needs to include three things: media(a photo or audio recording), location, and date. You CAN post an observation without these things, but it will be considered Casual.
Research Grade(RG) means that an eligible observation has at least 2 identifications, and 2/3rds of those identifications agree on a species. As stated above, in order to be eligible for research grade, an observation needs to include media, date, and location. Research grade observations are, as the name implies, able to be used in research by relevant professionals.
Needs ID means that an observation is eligible to become research grade, but does not yet have a 2/3rds consensus on species
Casual means that an observation is not able to be used in research. There are three main reasons an observation will be marked Casual. One, it is missing media/date/location. Two, it is a captive observation. Three, the user has opted out of community ID.
An observation is marked captive when the organism depicted is owned and cared for by humans with no intention of release. Common examples are pets, garden plants, and zoo animals. Captive does not apply to feral domesticated species, wildlife taken to rehab centers, invasive species, or plants that have spread beyond gardens into unmaintained land. Captive observations are not eligible to become RG.
iNaturalist allows you to set the location visibility on each observation to obscured, which displays the observations location as a 400 km^2 bounding box. You can also choose to assign locations manually instead of via image metadata, and thus set the “confidence interval” fairly large, such as encompassing your entire city.
Yes. Several projects actually utilize iNaturalist to keep track of species mortality causes. You do not have to censor anything, but some users will upload a cover image that states “Dead Observation”. This is a matter of individual user’s comfort levels.
ID it to the level you’re confident about. You shouldn’t leave it at “unknown” unless you are 100% unsure of what kind of lifeform it is. Initial IDs can be as general as “birds” “mammals” “plants” and so on. These generic categories help put your observation in the sights of more experienced identifiers. While some users do dedicate time to sorting observations marked “unknown”, they are much less likely to be seen.
[More in-depth guide TBA]
If you have reasons to be confident that their ID is correct, yes. Otherwise, just leave it. Erroneous agrees can lead to incorrect RG status.
Ask! Most identifiers are happy to explain their reasoning for an identification, and you don’t have to agree with them, you can simply let your own ID stand and allow other identifiers to chime in.
Unfortunately that happens, especially in taxonomic groups where less experts are active on iNaturalist. A few ways you can attempt to remedy this are submitting the observation to projects or tagging identifiers in the observation(a good place to start is the “top identifiers” leaderboard that will show up in the bottom right corner in desktop). And you can also consider researching that organism yourself!
No, but you should treat it like a polite public conversation
I wouldn’t recommend it, you’ll probably get suspended
prev this is an excellent site for four letter banding codes and i'm learning good things about my local birds but it is extremely funny to me that the website linked does nothing but DISS these codes
average accipitriformes identifier experience
inaturalist why arent people verifying my plants
inaturalist photo tips
inaturalist secret photo tips they dont want you to know
inaturalist average demographics
sexiest hand pics for plant lesbians
seductive hand poses for enticing plant girls
manicure 10mi
the thing they dont tell you about joining iNaturalist is how quickly you will acquire at least one nemesis
more people should comment on their inaturalist observations because this melted my heart and made me kinder
Docile, always moved slowly . new life philosophy just dropped