Aug 1, 2020 | News on Citizen Science
Dragonflies are often conspicuous animals but some are not easy to find. The river clubtail (Stylurus flavipes) is an example of the latter. This species lives in the sand on the bottom of large rivers as a larva and the adults wander around in large areas near the...
Jul 16, 2020 | News on Citizen Science
Social interaction between participants can lead to increased number of contributions, increased number of participants, and long-term participation. Opportunities for social interaction are especially promising for retaining participants on the long-term...
Jul 12, 2020 | News on Citizen Science
On average, citizen science projects are not very diverse in terms of demographics. The main domains in which the demographics of the participants are skewed are age, educational background, gender, race, cultural background, and (dis)ability – the “average”...
Jun 30, 2020 | News on Citizen Science
By Roy van Grunsven – DBC Light pollution is well known to affect individual moths. To what extent this also has a negative impact on moth populations was unknown. Insects can lay a lot of eggs and food availability and larval survival may determine population...
May 31, 2020 | News on Citizen Science
The ALAN conference series is dedicated to examining all aspects of artificial light at night. The broad scope of the conference includes how light is produced, where it is present, what effects it has on humans and the environment, how it is perceived by the public...
May 12, 2020 | News on Citizen Science
Citizen science interventions are becoming more and more relevant across all scientific disciplines and the humanities and it can potentially bring a wide variety of benefits to researchers, citizens, policy makers and society across the research and innovation cycle....