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City Nature Challenge

04 May

While everyone in NR-2 conducted the city nature challenge, I had Covid. Instead of staying in the quarantine dorms at school, I decided to go home to Connecticut for ten days to spend my time in isolation. Once I was healthy enough to go outside and hike around, I went to a local natural space near my home to check out the wildlife. This particular area is about a mile and a half away from my home, and has a very extensive acreage of forest that is maintained by a local land trust. This land is supposed to be off limits to the public, but I often go into the area to fish and hike, making it the perfect spot to visit when you have Covid. During my time hiking I saw a lot of species of plants and animals that would have made it into my iNaturalist report. I saw multiple red tailed hawks, edible trout lily plants, a plethora of trees, a mallard, geese, squirrels, turkeys, and white tailed deer. If you count the fish that I caught, I could have recorded a pickerel, northern pike, crappie, and largemouth bass. I found that my most memorable observations were the fish that I caught, because it is always a thrill landing a fish. This wasn’t my first experience using iNaturalist, but it is certainly a unique app. I have found that iNaturalist is great for identifying non-moving plant species, rather than animals and insects which tend to bolt away before you can get an accurate picture. I am a forestry major and have been able to utilize this app for identifying mystery trees by taking a picture of either the bark, bud, or leaf. This app is extremely useful for identifying species, and makes learning about nature more accessible. After looking at the collected data for the city of Burlington, it is not surprising that plants made up nearly two thirds of the recorded species. Behind this number of plants were bird species, and insects which are the other most numerous number of species, especially within the premises of a town/city. I am thoroughly surprised by the number of people that participated in this challenge worldwide, and it makes me happy to see people’s interest in nature. 

 
 

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