How it feels to be a Citizen Scientist (making an amazing find)

Tuesday, 12 May 2020 16:38

On Saturday last week, I was on a walk outside to get a little bit of sunshine. But since Citizen Science became a significant thing in my life, these rounds are not only for stretching my legs. With the smartphone in my pocket and a bunch of Citizen Science Apps installed, every walk feels like an adventure.

 Last Saturday I chose to visit the nearby park. Even in times of the Coronavirus Crisis, many people enjoyed a little bit of fresh air in socially well-partitioned groups. An urban park is a great place to explore and discover. I updated some of my phenology spots in "Nature's Calendar" to help to understand the impact of climate change on our environment.

But to be honest, a key motivation in uploading new observations is also to show my findings to the community and my friends. Participating in Citizen Science is always a social experience, too, and with the community features in the apps, I can easily interact with others.
Something just flew by. It seems to me that by my activity in Citizen Science projects over the years, my senses have become more trained in spotting small movements and points of interest. I jumped up and followed.

Let's spot some bees for Citizen Science

With the new "Spot-a-Bee" App, Citizen Scientists can record bee observations to create better knowledge about what kind of plants are helpful to bee populations and biodiversity in mainly urban areas. The passing insect was indeed a bee, a huge violet carpenter bee, covered in pollen and always in motion. It must have looked a little strange to the people in the park watching me quickly moving from one flower plant to another just to trying to photograph something that flies to the next source of pollen after a second. I can't think of a better sport.

Psathyrella typhae SPOTTERON Spotabee

In an urban artifical wetland basin

In this particular park, there is a water basin with Yellow Iris (Iris pseudacorus), which I observe for years now. Usually, it is a hub of biodiversity, but because of the ongoing drought in Europe, it is currently more a wetland or swamp. In normal weather conditions, it is teeming with life - from tiny crustaceans to larvae of dragonflies and water beetles. But now just honeybees drink water from the still moist ground. And there have been some tiny mushrooms.

Psathyrella typhae SPOTTERON Habitat

I am no mycology expert, but whenever I stumble upon a mushroom, I record the observation in the Citizen Science App of "Pilzfinder" by the Mycology Society of Austria and the University of Vienna. By my participation in the Citizen Science project, I have also learned to identify different mushroom species I have never heard of before. I also learned about what mushrooms are contributing to our daily lives by being an essential part of the carbon cycle and by interconnecting with trees and plants. Without fungi, there is nothing.

A Citizen Science app for mycology

Psathyrella typhae in the SPOTTERON Pilzfinder Citizen Science App

The project has no official smartphone apps (yet;), it is running as a SPOTTERON Package L with an interactive web-application as its primary tool for data input and community interaction. But as a designer of the platform, I enjoy access to test builds, and for Pilzfinder, there is one installed on my device.

I took my photographs - the project has taught me that when recording mushrooms for Citizen Science, you should always show the top and the bottom side of fungi to capture also its gills.
I have never expected it to be something important.

One beautiful thing about "Pilzfinder" project is that the mycologists and fungi experts give direct feedback on your observations and help with species classification. I was a little surprised that Irmgard Greilhuber, lead scientist of the project, commented on my spot that "she will drop by and collect some samples of the mushroom". Okay, just a regular day in mycology.

A fungi species on the red list

Yesterday evening, I checked our SPOTTERON account on Twitter for news - and there was a tweet highlighted in the notification area by Irmgard Greilhuber: https://twitter.com/IGreilhuber/status/1259849689022808065 

Psathyrella typhae SPOTTERON Tweet

 

The species of the find in the half-dried basin is "Psathyrella typhae" -  a red-listed endangered species, and my observation is the first confirmed record in Vienna, Austria! How amazing! Here are some pictures of this small, but beautiful mushroom in the artificial wetland basin in the "Weghuber Park" in Vienna, Austria.

For size reference, I use the DIY print-out card from the SpiderSpotter Citizen Science project, which I, as a spider enthusiast, carry with me all the time glued on top of my ATM card case. You can download and print your own at www.spiderspotter.com! All the photos have been shot with my smartphone. Modern devices have quite amazing cameras and you can take great close-ups with them:

Psathyrella typhae SPOTTERON Mushroom02

Psathyrella typhae SPOTTERON Mushroom03

In the moment of the news I had to double-check, read the tweet twice, and my heart pounded with enjoyment. What a fantastic moment, participating in a Citizen Science App is fulfilling enough, but making a new important finding is something extraordinary. I shared the tweet with my friends and the team immediately. It puts a smile on your face. It makes your day, and it gives you the feeling to have done something, that really matters. At least for me personally, by participating in Citizen Science Apps, I feel not only to be part of a community of people sharing the same interest. I feel like my participation is also part of something bigger: a collective urge to understand the world better and to help to protect it in times of biodiversity decline.

Look at the "Psathyrella typhae" mushroom observation

You can see my "Psathyrella typhae" Citizen Science observation here in the Pilzfinder Web-Application with just one click: https://www.spotteron.com/pilzfinder/spots/216424 - check it out and join up if you are interested in fungi! It is easy to register your account, which works as login in all Citizen Science apps on the SPOTTERON Platform. With the community features, we can follow each other and explore the world together. Let's connect in the app.
Philipp | SPOTTERON

 

Browse the Citizen Science Apps on SPOTTERON

  • Our collaboration with SPOTTERON has been essential for our citizen science project. The ideas of our research have been efficiently implemented into the app in a simple and didactic way, thanks to the good communication and professionalism of the team.
    Sara Blanco Ramirez, PhD student, Hydrology and Climate
  • Mammals Atlas Kenya (MAKENYA), an operational mobile application to submit mammal sightings by citizens was launched in January 2021. I found the SPOTTERON team very magnanimous, highly professional, meticulous and committed to their work; and definitely I recommend the team to anyone interested in citizen science applications worldwide.
    Simon Musila, Mammalogy Section, National Museums of Kenya
  • Working with SPOTTERON for our citizen science app was the best decision our team could have made! Philipp and his team led us through the design process and helped us translate our ideas into reality. As US clients, we were surprised that there was no lag in communication due to the time difference where the SPOTTERON team works. I am convinced they work around the clock! They always responded quickly to our emails and scheduled calls to meet our schedule. I highly recommend working with SPOTTERON if you are designing a citizen science app.

    Jules Bruck, University of Delaware
  • Choosing SPOTTERON for our CrowdWater project was the best decision we could have made for developing the app. Excellent implementation of our (sometimes not entirely thought through) ideas, competent advice, and a fair business model - working with SPOTTERON is a major factor why CrowdWater is working so well.

    Prof. Jan Seibert, Department of Geography Hydrology and Climate, University of Zurich
  • SPOTTERON has enabled Tea Bag Index to widen our citizen scientist engagement methods and helped us to come up with ideas on how to bring soils closer to the public. It is a pleasure to work with a company who wants to create a platform that is a communication possibility for everybody involved in the project!

    Dr. Taru Sandén, Austrian Agency for Health and Food Safety - AGES
  • Working together with Spotteron has been a smooth and fast way to get our Citizen Science project started! Their impressive experience in app building as well as in communication with citizens has proven to be invaluable and complements nicely with a team of scientists taking their first steps in citizen science!

    Bram Vanthournout, Ghent University
  • GLOBAL 2000 has been working closely with Spotteron for more than 3 years. Together we have started the DreckSpotz app and are constantly developing it. The SPOTTERON team is not only incredibly competent, but above all very flexible and uncomplicated. That's why we feel extremely well looked after as an environmental organization and NGO.

    Johannes Frauscher, GLOBAL 2000, Friends of Earth Austria
  • The decision to use the SPOTTERON Citizen Science platform for our participatory project can be summarized best in this way: it was possible in a short time to create a well-working and user-friendly Citizen Science app for our research. The positive feedback on our project "Landauf - LandApp" shows that involving citizens in a scientific project can be a lot of fun when using the right tool.

    Daniel Fähle, National Archive Baden-Württemberg, Germany
  • The app developed by SPOTTERON is an ideal extension to our established methods and strengthens the inclusion of Citizen Scientists. The design and intuitive usability relate also to a young audience. Especially the community features make a direct feedback possible and it is especially motivating that the SPOTTERON team themselves are actively contributing in the app - a win-win situation for everyone.

    Irmgard Greilhuber, Mycological Society Austria, University of Vienna
  • Working with SPOTTERON to design the app was an interesting experience for me. As an ecology PhD student, I knew how to catch Brush-turkeys and design experiments to learn about their behaviour. I knew next to nothing about how to engage with the broader community at large. SPOTTERONS’s expertise was invaluable here, they have experience in designing apps that people want to use, and balance detail with ease of function.
    Matthew Hall, University of Sydney
  • I've worked with loads of app developers over my career, but none so high quality as SPOTTERON. Their capabilities are astounding. They are incredibly innovative, creative and agile with a keen sense of humour and lightness. SPOTTERON apps are the benchmark of how to do citizen science well. They are elevating our ability to engage with the natural world in a meaningful way.
    Jen Sutfin, EarthWatch Australia
  • SPOTTERON brings a lot of passion and lots of expertise in the field of Citizen Science to the table, to present projects - not only in technical terms - in the right light. The websites for both schweiz-forscht.ch and ecsa-conference.eu are based on good and easy cooperation with our Austrian partners.

    Yasemin Tutav, Science et Cité
  • I’m amazed by SPOTTERON's passion for CitizenScience, impressed by their energy and initiatives and grateful for what I’ve learned by collaborating with them on the Fjällkalendern app.

    Kjell Bolmgren, University of Stockholm
  • As a scientist, collaborating with SPOTTERON to create our Citizen Science App ‘Fågelbär’ was the right choice. We could focus on what type of data we want to collect and the team at SPOTTERON designed, built and are now running the App!

    Matilda Arnell, University of Stockholm
  • With our SPOTTERON App Nature's Calendar ZAMG we are always technically up-to-date. As a result we are able to offer our Citizen Scientists a tool which is also appealing to today's generation without having to worry about any technical questions.

    Thomas Hübner, Zentralanstalt für Meteorologie und Geodynamik ZAMG
  • Working with SPOTTERON implies working with a professional partner on the topics of Apps & Citizen Science. I was always very pleased about the reliability, but also the openness to try new things and the possibility to exchange with competent partners. Thanks!

    Dr. Dott. Didone Frigerio, University of Vienna, KLF Grünau/Almtal
  • With our project Roadkill, we were on the SPOTTERON platform since its beginnings, this way we got to witness the great development of this tool first-hand and were able to contribute in the shaping process. SPOTTERON manages the fine balance between scientific research, community management and modern design. The personal collaboration on a professional level supports the comfortable atmosphere in the project.

    Florian Heigl PhD, University of Life Sciences (BOKU), Vienna
  • If you are looking for a dedicated team for the development of a Citizen Science App - even if that has to happen quite fast- you are in good hands at SPOTTERON. Fast communication, straightforward coordination and running updates of the app, even after the release, characterize our successful collaboration.

    Magdalena Gärtner, Center for Human-Computer Interaction, University of Salzburg
  • Through the SPOTTERON App "Was geht ab?" we were able to create an appealing and useful possibility for kids, to spot problem- and feel-good areas in their home- and school surroundings. In the SPOTTERON team we found reliable and creative partners, that care about more than just the implementation. 

    Juliane Stark, University of Life Sciences (BOKU), Vienna
  • Thanks to the experience and the knowhow as well as the basic structure of SPOTTERON, we were able to have the CrowdWater apps developed in no time. We consider the model that allows every project to use all newly developed tools very fair and transparent. This way our apps even got some new features, we didn't even know we needed before.

    Simon Etter, University of Zurich
  • Through SPOTTERON we share more than just an app infrastructure with other projects, we also share ideas. This way we get to develop and constantly improve user-friendly apps, which are easy to handle and work for many different kinds of projects.

    Barbara Strobl, University of Zurich
  • To me, SPOTTERON is the successful combination of scientific claim and aesthetic design. The apps work intuitively, are extremely appealing and still fulfill all my scientific requirements when it comes to data quality and safety. Working together happens in a very loyal and trusting way and that allows us to profit from the design- and usability experience SPOTTERON has.

    Daniel Dörler, University of Life Sciences (BOKU), Vienna
  • What I especially like about SPOTTERON, is that we get to use many ideas and new tools that were developed for other projects in the SPOTTERON family without having to pay for them..

    Klaus Wanninger, Lacon

Short News

  • A new paper titled "Citizen Science Approaches for Water Quality Measurements" has been published by the scientists behind CrowdWater. Find it in the papers section!

    in Shortnews
  • A new paper from the Horizon 2020 project IPM titled "Genetic variability of Metarhizium isolates from the Ticino Valley Natural Park (Northern Italy) as a possible microbiological resource for the management of Popillia japonica" has been added to our page. Find this and other Citizen Science related publications on the SPOTTERON Papers & Publications section.

    in Shortnews

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