Get ready now for the 2022 Great Southern BioBlitz!

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Citizen science is raising awareness about biodiversity on 28-31 October 2022.

The ‘Great Southern BioBlitz’, or ‘GSB’ for short, is an international period of intense biological surveying to record all the living species within several designated areas across the Southern Hemisphere in Spring.

The purpose of this event is to highlight both the immense biodiversity spread across the Southern Hemisphere in the flourishing springtime, as well as to engage the public in science and nature learning using the citizen science platform iNaturalist.

You and your students can become citizen scientists and participate in the biggest bioblitz across the southern hemisphere!

The video can also be used as an introduction to explain the importance of the citizen science project and raise awareness of the importance of maintaining and mapping biodiversity.

Word Count / video length: 711 / 02:10 min

The Great Southern BioBlitz will run from 28 – 31 October 2022. Credit: Great Southern BioBlitz

The Great Southern BioBlitz (GSB) from the 28th to 31st of October is encouraging people to get involved.

It’s an international citizen science event in which people in the Southern Hemisphere help provide a snapshot study of a specific location. Scientists and the community work together to survey and record as many species of flora, fauna, fungi, and aquatic life as possible within a certain time frame – in this case 96 hours.

These observations can then be used by local environmental groups, government departments, students, and other organisations to increase biodiversity awareness, protect habitat, determine species distribution, increase scientific literacy, contribute to climate change research, and inform policy.

This is the third year of the Great Southern BioBlitz.

The first Great Southern BioBlitz in 2020 attracted more than 3,000 participants across 12 countries and three continents, who uploaded more than 91,000 observations of more than 12,000 species. Last year, the second one built on that success with 5,789 observers across 19 countries.

Everyone is invited to participate using the iNaturalist app and website; iNaturalist is an online social network of naturalists, citizen scientists, and biologists mapping and sharing observations of biodiversity across the globe.

Where and when can I participate in the Great Southern BioBlitz?

The 2022 Great Southern BioBlitz will be held from 12:01am Friday 28 October until 11:59pm Monday 31 October in your local time zone.

As you might have already guessed, you must be making observations somewhere in the Southern Hemisphere.

Participating areas are nominated by volunteer Local Area Organisers, who define the observation boundaries which can include one or more Local Government Areas (LGAs). But all observations made on the iNaturalist platform during the Great Southern BioBlitz will be automatically included in the overall event, so your area doesn’t need to be officially involved.

The iNaturalist platform has several nodes that upload collected data to a national database, so it’s best to use your local node if one exists – or just use www.iNaturalist.org.

Video length: 02:10 min

How do you find and document species during #GSB22?

It’s super simple to contribute to the event!

“Download the free iNaturalist app and take a walk. Take photos and upload them using the app,” says Michelle Neil, one of the founders of the Great Southern BioBlitz.

The app is available for download on the App Store and Google Play. Alternatively, you can make an account on the iNaturalist website on your computer and upload observations that way.

After this, you’ll have 14 days (until 14th November) to upload and identify your observations.

It’s fine if you can’t identify the organism in your observation, the important thing is to make sure you get good clear photos or sound files as evidence, and a date and location (in the form of coordinates).

Unsure about how to do that? Not to worry, there are some helpful video tutorials on the iNaturalist website that walk you through the process of uploading observations, taking identifiable photos, exploring observations and more.

Keep in mind that the observations must be of a wild organism to count, so pets, pot plants, zoo animals, or flowers planted in public areas by councils won’t be included in the BioBlitz.

“It’s easy to be a citizen scientist and document species in your local area during the Great Southern BioBlitz’s 96-hour window from the 28th to 31st of October this year – so get out there!” says Neil.

This article is republished from Cosmos. Read the original article here.

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