Field interns split their time evenly between the banding and hawkwatch programs, and can expect to work with a large and dedicated group of
volunteer citizen scientists on a daily basis.
The data that Old Weather
volunteer citizen scientists meticulously transcribe from the logbooks are used to drive climate and sea ice models to help understand changes and improve predictions.
The work of the 2.3 million
volunteer citizen scientists who contribute to biodiversity research have an economic value of up to $ 2.5 billion per year, said Jennifer Gustetic, assistant director for open innovation in the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, Executive Office of the President.
Shedd acknowledges and appreciates
all volunteer citizen scientists and extends its gratitude to organizations facilitating the research efforts, including the Park District of Highland Park, Urban Ecology Center, Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, Ridges Sanctuary, Door County Land Trust, Great Lakes Indian Fish & Wildlife Commission, and the Huron Mountain Club.
Not exact matches
While nonprofit organizations benefit from the work of
citizen scientists, the
volunteers enjoy another benefit; remaining lifelong learners while they contribute.
Collaborating with Citizen
Scientists by Lucas Laursen, 25 June 2010
Scientists and industry professionals are not your only options for collaborators;
volunteer citizens can also help you collect and even analyze data.
The program's goal is to train
volunteers to serve as
citizen scientists, documenting shoreline conditions along Alabama's shoreline using GPS coordinates and alerting officials and COAST partners to the presence of oil and / or affected wildlife.
While some
citizen science programs are modeled on the idea that
volunteers are strictly there to learn from professionals, Shirk said
citizen scientists also want to be part of a discovery and help gather data relevant to a problem that interests them in calling upon programs to embrace learning together.
Bioinformaticist Andrew Su (center front) has launched a crowdsourcing campaign to find game - changing links in biomedical literature by using
volunteer «
citizen scientists.»
Those limited resources mean that JunoCam's
scientists rely on a small army of
volunteer «
citizen scientists» using backyard telescopes to flag transient features in the Jovian atmosphere as «points of interest» for the instrument to observe.
Thanks to the Internet, amateur
volunteers known as «
citizen scientists» can readily donate their time and effort to science — in fields ranging from medicine to zoology to astrophysics.
Dr Cox said that it is important to understand the motivations of
citizen scientists due to the possibility of increased competition to recruit and retain such
volunteers in the future.
He collaborated with park managers,
citizen scientist programs, and
volunteer groups to obtain samples.
The researchers credited a cadre of
citizen scientists and
volunteers who donated their spare cellular smartphone minutes and computer time.
Since its founding in 1992, NatureMapping has grown from its origin as a small - scale Washington State nature program that enlisted retired resources professionals, zoo docents, and Audubon Society members as
citizen -
scientist volunteer wildlife reporters.
The program relies on «
citizen scientist»
volunteers to do the counting.
Volunteers («
citizen scientists») are stationed at a dozen spots around Maui to track and count the whales.