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BioBlitz on the Agricultural Campus

Posted by Stephanie Rogers on September 12, 2018 in News
Pollinator Meadow on the Agricultural Campus
Pollinator Meadow on the Agricultural Campus

By Colette Wyllie

Next Friday, September 21st the Faculty of Agriculture will be hosting an inaugural BioBlitz on the 麻豆传媒 Agricultural Campus.

A Bioblitz is a rapid survey of the biological diversity within a fixed area and time. Using the platform 鈥渋Naturalist鈥, students, faculty, staff, alumni and community members will be asked to record, inventory and manage observations of the biodiversity found on campus.

鈥淚t can be easy to overlook the incredible array of biodiversity that surrounds us,鈥 said Dr. Paul Manning, instructor in the Plant, Food and Environmental Sciences department at the Faculty of Agriculture.聽 鈥淥ur local environments are teeming with life: from the diminutive flowers of the Lesser Centaury growing from sidewalk cracks, to the impressive red plumage of Northern cardinals calling from the tops of trees. If we don't stop to notice - will we realize if their populations decline, or disappear altogether?鈥

The Agricultural Campus is home to a variety of different ecosystems: rivers, forest, agricultural land, meadows and more.聽 This event will encourage participants to explore areas of campus which they do not typically frequent. Interacting with experts to learn about the names, behaviours and ecological roles of the organisms living on campus will hopefully encourage students and community members to become better stewards of, and advocates for, the variety of ecosystems amongst which we work, study and live.

The idea for a BioBlitz came from a friendly challenge issued by Dr. Lara Gibson, an Instructor with the Faculty of Science. She and her colleagues successfully organized a BioBlitz on the Studley campus in 2016. Their efforts resulted in 739 observations of 286 species.

This fall, the campus community is participating in a friendly challenge to see which campus can generate the most records (i.e. number of observations) and the more comprehensive species inventory (i.e. the most unique species). Among the Bicentennial Botanical Garden exists large, extensive horticultural collections and an array of habitats including rivers, forest fragments, agricultural fields, pollinator meadows, aquaculture facilities, campus barns and more.

鈥淲e are optimistic that we will find all sorts of interesting species that call our campus home,鈥 Manning added.

The iNaturalist platform is quickly gaining popularity world-wide. Currently, there are more than 12 million observations of more than 150,000 species logged on this platform. While participating in this activity, students and community members will be introduced to an international community of naturalists and learn the basics of a user-friendly web-based tool for observing and recording biodiversity.

The event is open to the greater community and there is no charge to participate. To get started, download the iNaturalist app to your mobile device or check it out on a browser at .

For more information about using iNaturalist and this specific project, visit .

On September 21st, bring a curious mind and a sturdy pair of footwear to the BioBlitz headquarters in the new Student Learning Commons (upper floor of the MacRae Library) to be part of the fun!