A few weeks ago, a study in PLoS Biology caught my eye. It found that the general public could help to prevent species of birds from becoming extinct by recording sightings of birds online, including common species.
When judging the level of risk a bird species is at, scientists compare modern data to historical accounts on where the birds have been found. If there is a dramatic decrease in sightings of a bird species, then it is considered for a protected status. This study found that “far less data is currently being collected on common species than in the past.”
According to Imperial College London: “Data from websites where members of the public record bird sightings accounted for less than one percent of the data the researchers collected, but the team hope that the internet will enable citizen scientists to make a big impact on future biodiversity research.”
I agree. I hope the internet will enable “citizen scientists” to make a big impact on future biodiversity research and I am a little surprised that it hasn’t already.
Here at Speed, I like to think we are quite environmentally conscious. One of our MDs is a bicycle commuter and the other is striving towards sustainability with his farmhouse in rural Northumberland. In the past I have worked with environment groups and am even listed as a contributor to a breeding bird atlas. We are also all online, social and obviously into our tech. What’s stopping people like us from becoming “citizen scientists” and contributing to this much needed research on common bird species? It isn’t like there aren’t any birds of interest in urban London.
With the rise of social networking and mobile technology, there is so much potential for a cool solution to this data crisis.
An iPhone app combining Foursquare with a bird guide is a solution that first comes to mind. Combining location-based functionality, a guide for identifications, a social aspect to share sightings on Facebook and even competitive aspects, with badges or rewards, would do the trick. I want to be Mayor Twitcher of Leicester Square!
The data could be collected and made open and available to research groups, and hopefully improve on the less that one percent of bird sightings that currently come from members of the public.
I thought for sure that a solution like this would exist already, but I have been searching in the App Store and online with no luck.
I think it is definitely something that a charity like the RSPB or the Leverhulme Trust, the group who funded the research, should look into putting some budget towards.
Or, perhaps there could be a grassroots solution. If you’re a bird-loving iPhone app developer or a publisher who owns the rights to a birding guide, please get in touch with a comment, tweet or email. Maybe we could link up and work on something together.
If such an app already exist, do let me know. I’d love for an easy to get busy adding my bird sightings to important research.
UPDATE:
Getting some great feedback. Thanks! I thought I’d collect and share it here:
A couple folks have said that similar things to what I’ve described do exist. There is Project NOAH for the iPad and BirdsEye, which sounds great but is North American only. Both have lots of potential, if only they were geographically and technologically accessible! Maybe an open source program that collects data on a shared website might be the answer. That way people can submit data through a variety of apps and websites.
Some people think that birders aren’t interested in gadgets, but I don’t that prevents this from being a good idea. Birders are already submitting data. With a fun game-like app, non-birders and newbies can start adding the much needed sightings of common birds, improving the amount of data.
Anyway, someone has said that their birding group are using mobile email from BlackBerrys as they are out in the field to report sightings. So clearly there is potential for birders using an app.
Tom from the RSPB said:
iPhone applications are something we have been thinking about for a while. It is clearly a great idea which has evidently gained public interest, but this is not something which the RSPB currently endorse due to the complex array of copyright issues involved getting such a product off the ground. but a great idea!
Thanks so much all the ideas and feedback. Please keep it coming!
UPDATE (30/06/10):
Got some great feedback from the academic and tech communities. This is getting really exciting! Pieces are coming togther and should have more details to share soon.










There is something somewhat similar to what you are proposing.
http://ebird.org/content/ebird/news/BirdsEye
but it only works for North America so far.
There’s an app called Twitcher for the iPhone that logs bird sightings for the UK by location and you can send them by e-mail in an excel file, probably the closest thing so far.
I am so amazed I found this blog post. You linked to it from the RSPB forums where you talked about an iPhone app for bird sightings. The amazing thing is is that I am a second (soon to be third) year computer science student from the UK, and my dissertation proposal is just your idea. Perhaps I should say now I have not stolen the idea from you, I only came across you blog today and got my dissertation project approved about a month ago. This was my proposal:
I propose an iPhone app that can be used as an identification tool to identify UK animals, including birds, mammals, insects and other species. The app will use information from open information sources such as Wikipedia and the BBC’s wildlife website (they are currently developing an web ontology and API to allow access to their information on biological species) to provide data on species location, habitat, diet, height/size, and up to date population figures. This information will be supplemented with photographs from flickr by searching image tags to find good, appropriate images to aid in identification. There will be some optimisation here to ensure the photos are reliable (using information about the flickr user; amount of comments and views on their uploads) and of a good quality (using the exif data of the uploaded images).
The app’s other function will be that of a personal species-spotting journal to log when and where an animal has been seen, and to make further notes such as how many were seen, the behaviour or the animal etc. The location information (taken from the iPhones GPS data) will allow the user to build up a map of where they have seen species of animals so as to help them find the species again in the future. This information will be available on a public google map (if the user so desires) so that other users can see when and where certain species are more abundant/frequent, and can travel to find them themselves. The app will have some knowledge of endangered and protected species so that associated location information cannot be shared publicly.
I would love to here any thoughts and ideas from anyone as I am reasearching this project over the summer months in preperation for my next term. Reply to this comment or use my email address supplied in the comment (I think this can only be seen by the blog owner however). I will also be looking for iPhone beta testers at some point so anyone who would like to participate please get in contact.
Apologies for the long post.
Luke
Hey Luke,
That sounds awesome.
Apart from the Google Map and the personal species-spotting journal, will the information be available as raw data in a format that researchers can use?
Would love to chat more. Sending you an email now.
Dan
[...] Dan Howe has written about how the web can be used as a platform for citizen science projects. Here he explores how an iPhone app could be used to track threatens species. Posted in Interesting, Social media Tags: Ancient Tree Hunt, Citizen science, Woodland Trust [...]