If you were to ask me a few weeks ago to name all of the plant species in my suburban Indiana neighborhood that I knew, I would have said grass, of course, dandelions, daffodils and some clovers. While I’ve always loved nature, I’ve just never had a means of learning about the species around me. Now, just a week after downloading a couple of nature apps, I’m up to 33 different types of plants! For this, I owe credit to the apps iNaturalist and Seek.
INATURALIST
The app store description states that iNaturalist allows you to “Observe and identify plants and animals with your friends,” but there are many bells and whistles to explore too. The overarching idea is to find, upload and identify pictures of new plants you come across. (You can also do this for animals, in which case I’ll applaud you for snapping a quality photo before they fly/hop/run away!) The various sections of the app are described below.
NEW OBSERVATION
iNaturalist is built around observations, which is the fun part for those in quarantine looking for something social distancing-approved to do outdoors. While you can just explore other user content if desired, producing your own is a great way to contribute. You can upload a photo or sound and type in the species if you know its identification. The date, time and location will be automatically recorded if you’ve given the app permission. If you don’t know the species, don’t worry! There are several plant and animal enthusiasts out there waiting for your photo to pop up so they can help ID it.
EXPLORE
The Explore page offers a grid layout of all of the recent observations in your location or another area of your choice. You can search for specific species or narrow down the selection to plants, mammals, insects, reptiles, fish, mollusks, amphibians, fungi, birds or arachnids. You can also filter the content by observations that need identification, are uploaded by certain users or have sounds if you’re into birds, for example. If you’re a pro yourself, you can validate other people’s identifications, suggest IDs or make comments.
iNaturalist’s Explore All page can be displayed as a gallery or map. (Shout out to whoever is making observations in Lake Michigan!)
PROJECTS
This is where you can join groups of others, oftentimes geographically close to you, to collaborate in uploading species or compete to see who can observe the most. There are several variations of city nature challenges near me alone, so the chances are high that your city has many projects you can join too, or you can create your own with friends or family! For those who are competitive in nature, you can race to the top of the leaderboards for most observations made and most species observed.
GUIDES
If you’re interested in something even more comprehensive, there are several guides for different categories of plants and animals as they appear in various regions.
ACTIVITY
Any notifications related to your observations or those of observations you’re following will appear here, but so will relevant news articles like the timely “Exploring Nature When You’re Stuck at Home” that showed up in my feed or other global news from rare plants in the Atacama to assassin bugs in China.
MISSIONS
This is a great place to explore for anyone who is goal or task oriented. iNaturalist will suggest species that are common near your location and challenge you to observe them and then remove them from your list once found.
SEEK
If you’re thinking “wow, this sounds fun, but I don’t know my species very well,” iNaturalist has a children’s app called Seek that does the identification for you! Once you find a new species, the app uses your camera to analyze it and narrow it down the ranks of the plant kingdom as much as possible. It is able to identify at the species level most of the time, though it sometimes stops at genus or family if it’s having trouble recognizing it. This way, you can upload your observations to iNaturalist with identifications to impress your friends or the wider plant and animal community! (If Seek can’t narrow down your observation, don’t be afraid to post it with whatever information you have or even no information. Again, there are plenty of people eager to help with unknown species.)
However, having iNaturalist is not a prerequisite to Seek, as Seek can stand independently of its parent app and also offers various challenges and badges to keep you motivated.
Seek trying to identify this species of brambles to add to My Observations.