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Observation dates are 1 March – 15 May, 2020.
Goal: See as many species as possible wherever you are in the world, and also add them to our Personal Bioblitz project on iNaturalist to see what we can discover together.
Who Can Participate?
You can be part of the Spring 2020 Personal Bioblitz if you fit one or more of these categories:
How to Join?
Note, you need to get an iNaturalist account first, then fill in the form, so that you can list the iNaturalist account name on the form and we can add you to the project.
- Create a free iNaturalist account.
- On iNaturalist, search for Personal Bioblitz 2020 under Projects, and when you find it, join the project by click on Join. (or find the project here)
General Rules
Challenges
Which Species and Observations Count?
YES, Count It!
- The observation or collection date is within the project dates.
- You saw or heard the species. Even better, have a photo of it.
- Outdoor species, unassisted* (ex. birds, insects, mosses)
- Indoor species, unassisted* (ex. cockroaches, mice, bread mold)
- Remnants of once alive species (ex. antlers, roadkill, shells, dried fruits) as long as unlabeled and you know its collection date and geographic origin, and it was originally collected during the Bioblitz period [mark the type of remnant in your iNaturalist observation notes field].
- Microscopic species (including bacteria and archaea), as long as actual organism is wild-collected during the bioblitz period and observed (not just its effect), and it wasn’t ordered or kept in a lab as labeled culture. We highly encourage the use of microscopes to find protozoa, planktons, fungi, parasites, etc.
- Species as part of research projects collected in the wild (as long as unidentified specimens and collected during the project time frame).
- Humans and feral populations of former pets, crops, and farm animals.
- Invasive, parasitic, and alien species (weeds, pests, etc.).
NO, Doesn’t Count!
* Unassisted species are those that live without assistance from humans. Pets, houseplants, and planted crops are considered assisted if they rely on humans to survive. Feral cats and abandoned crop fields are unassisted since they no longer rely on humans. Humans are considered a wild species, and counts in the Personal Bioblitz.

Getting started on iNaturalist
How Do I Use iNaturalist for This Project?
How Do I Get Help with Identification?
Who Runs This Project? Who Do I Contact?
The project is led by Dr. Lena Struwe and a Leadership Team. For questions, contact Lena Struwe.
This project is run by Chrysler Herbarium at the School of Environmental and Biological Sciences at Rutgers University in collaboration with iNaturalist (California Academy of Sciences and National Geographic Society).


For questions or comments about this site, contact lena.struwe@rutgers.edu.