Project Noah

Project Noah is a tool to explore and document wildlife and a platform to harness the power of citizen scientists everywhere.

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Project Noah iPhone and Android apps

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Grab a photograph of an interesting organism and share it with the community.

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florida birds

this mission is for all the bird lovers out there

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Exploring Your Local Ecosystem

In class today, you learned about producers and consumers. As we continue our study of wildlife and ...

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My Local Ecosystem

In class today, you learned about producers and consumers. As we continue our study of wildlife and ...

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Charles Carroll Middle School Bioblitz

Charles Carroll Middle School in New Carrollton, Maryland is conducting a schoolyard bioblitz in ...

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Salisbury Middle School Biodiversity

Students and teachers at Salisbury Middle School are collecting and sharing wildlife observations ...

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World Science Festival Cicada Count

We're calling all citizen scientists to help track 17-Year Cicadas! Join the World Science Festival ...

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Crystal Cove Environmental Study Loop Plants

Help Crystal Cove State Park create a digital field guide of plants at the Environmental Study ...

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Crystal Cove Raptors

Help Crystal Cove State Park understand which raptors can be found at the Environmental Study Loop. ...

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Weather

A catalogue of interesting and beautiful weather phenomena.

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South Dakota Backyard Biodiversity

When your flower beds or vegetable garden is in bloom this summer, pick a day (or a few days) to go ...

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Bats of Africa

The bat fauna of Africa and surrounding islands boasts nearly 300 species, but the distributions of ...

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Trees of Winkler

Trees form an integral part of the landscape of the modern city. Though fewer are indigenous to the ...

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Camouflage creatures

Many creatures mimic their surroundings or hides very well with the surrounding. Pet, wild, or ...

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Mission Mollusk

This mission aims to spot, and identify as many different species of Mollusk as possible. Marine, ...

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the sarawak adventure

documenting and sharing the wildlife you encounter in and around the sarawak state.,discover the ...

Activity
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Unknown spotting favorited by Jakubko São José do Rio Pardo, São Paulo, Brazil 38 seconds ago

I found this specimen in a region of transition between the Cerrado and Atlantic Forest.

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Small Grass Emerald favorited by Jakubko Δήμος Βόλου, Περιφέρεια Θεσσαλίας, Greece 56 seconds ago

A small green emerald moth, spotted in my front porch, Volos Greece.

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Contortionist Moth favorited by Jakubko Chiapas, Mexico a minute ago

This little moth of about 1 cm in length is a contortionist! When it lands it twists its wings upside-down and backwards. This must help break up the classic "moth shape" which means food to a bird. The upper wings are beautiful with orange, brown and silver.

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Red-winged Blackbird spotted by Gordon Dietzman Saint Paul, Minnesota, USA a minute ago

The red-winged blackbird is a common bird over much of North America. The male (shown) is a small black bird with red and yellow epaulets on the shoulders. The female is a dark brown with patterning on the breast, buff around the face, and a darker cap and line through the eye.

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Glassy-winged Sharpshooter favorited by Maria dB San Diego, California, USA a minute ago

This adult leafhopper has clear, glassy wings with red veining. The abdomen is white with black spots and blotches. The head is yellow with black spots. This adult emerged this morning.

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Horsetail spotted by Gaia80 Vestfold, Norway a minute ago

Green plant, about 15 cm in height. The horsetails are a group of plants in the genus Equisetaceae which is more than 300 million years old and at that time could be up to 30 meters in height. They reproduce using spores instead of seeds.

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Mapping Nature on Your Smartphone

For the developers at New York start-up Networked Organisms, smartphones are the butterfly nets of the 21st Century. Their tool, Project Noah, lets people upload photos of plants and wildlife around them, creating a map of the natural world and contributing to scientific research in the process.

WSJ
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What kind of beetle? This app knows

Bespectacled scientists of yore would carry around hefty field guides, made up of hundreds of pages of text and photos. But these days, smartphone owners have a lighter option: an app called Project Noah, which aims to help people identify plants and animals as well as collect data from "citizen scientists" about where certain species are located.

CNN
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Designing ecosystems for talent development

Project Noah enables us to be part of a more focused online community where we can learn more about wildlife around us and contribute to scientific research. It pulls participants into deeper, more meaningful engagement by enabling people to go on “missions” to collectively map changes based on sightings.

The Economist
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A smart way to save wildlife

A modern invention that may also hold the key to saving species in the future. Project Noah is a global study that encourages nature lovers to document the wildlife they encounter, using a purpose built phone app and web community. In addition to the virtual "collection" of species, Project Noah encourages citizen science by linking up with existing surveys including the International Spider Survey and the Global Coral Reef Monitoring Network.

BBC
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Dial-a-Class

New mobile applications include a tool called NOAH that lets you take cellphone pictures of bugs and trees and then sends back an identification of the exact type in as little as 24 hours.

NY TIMES
With support from National Geographic