presentation to Wenatchee North Rotary Club Susan Reynolds Ballinger, founder of Wenatchee Naturalist & Chelan-Douglas Land Trust Conservation Fellow

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Citizen Science- What it is? How you can get involved? April 26, 2017 presentation to Wenatchee North Rotary Club Susan Reynolds Ballinger, founder of Wenatchee Naturalist & Chelan-Douglas Land Trust Conservation Fellow http://www.wenatcheenaturalist.com/ Horse Lake Reserve, ebird monitoring project skylinebal@gmail.com

What is Citizen Science? The Oxford English Dictionary recently defined citizen science as: scientific work undertaken by members of the general public, often in collaboration with or under the direction of professional scientists and scientific institutions.

A growing field of public participation in scientific research (PPSR) Includes citizen science, volunteer monitoring, and other forms of organized research Members of the public engage in the process of scientific investigations: asking questions, collecting data, and/or interpreting results.

The Cornell Lab has been at the forefront of citizen science since 1966 It continues to innovate by creating online tools enabling people to share and explore their data. Today, the birding community taps into millions of records to see how their own sightings fit into the continental picture scientists analyze the data to reveal striking changes in the movements, distributions, and numbers of birds through time.

ebird http://ebird.org/ebird/hotspots Use ebird to view barcharts, range maps, and time period and location for any species in a given region Example: Wenatchee Confluence State Park hotspot [ Wenatchee Confluence SP/Horan Wildlife Area ] [ Wenatchee Confluence SP/Horan Wildlife Area ]

The Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation is an international nonprofit organization that protects wildlife through the conservation of invertebrates and their habitats. Citizen Science Projects include: Bumblebee Watch Western Monarch Count Migratory Dragonfly Partnership Milkweed Survey

The Great Sunflower Project- a backyard citizen science project community of gardeners, beekeepers, birders and naturalists who are providing thousands of records of pollinators each year since 2008. Your records are invaluable data on the state of our pollinators and are helping to build the best data set on plants and pollinators.

Vision A world where people understand, value, and participate in science. Mission Advance citizen science through communication, coordination, and education. http://citizenscience.org

Rare Care Program of Citizen Science Volunteers In 2016, 142 reports were completed by volunteers at sites throughout the state, mostly on public lands. Volunteers found the rare plant species at 58% of the sites monitored. Five sites found by volunteers represented potentially new occurrences tracked by the Washington Natural Heritage Program. Rare Care trained 32 new volunteers in 2016 and 121 volunteers participated in the project statewide.

Sagebrush and shrub steppe are a dominant communities in eastern Washington. Audubon s goals are to stabilize or increase sagebrush songbird populations; advance our understanding of sagebrush songbird responses to habitat management practices; advocate for ecosystem-based management on publicly-owned land; identify priority conservation areas under future climate conditions; educate and engage new audiences around value of sagebrush & shrub steppe ecosystem

Fall 2016 Annual Report

Upper Basin Birders -17 years of volunteer citizen science Wildlife biologist, Heather Murphy (Retired, USFS) is the citizen science project coordinator for the Upper Basin Birders who monitor 21 bird survey stations in the upper Wenatchee Watershed. Between Oct. 2015-2016, a total of 40 volunteers have participated, contributing over 1000 hours in the field on once/month surveys. During the project s 17 years, 204 different species of birds have been recorded. 1800 individual checklists have been entered in the Cornell Lab of Ornithology s ebird database, allowing scientists world-wide to use the data.

Cheatgrass root growth inhibition study at Horse Lake Reserve Citizen Science Project: After a Dec. 2016 application of soil bacteria, monitor the density of annual cheatgrass in both treated and nontreated plots at Horse Lake Reserve s native plant restoration project site.

Mountain Home Preserve Bird Monitoring Citizen Science Project: Monitor bird use before and after the forest is thinned to restore the pre-1900 state as an open ponderosa pine stand

Citizen Science Project: Compare non-planted with planted areas to learn if planting bitterbrush and sagebrush results in faster regrow. Wenatchee School District students help with Post-2015 Wildfire shrub plantings in the North Foothills- fall 2016 over 600 tublings planted

Photo Point 1: Balsamroot Trail, north trailhead July 10, 2015. Wildfire burned on June 28-29, 2015 2 weeks post-fire Site 1A: Balsamroot Trail, north trailhead NAD83, latitude 47.45823 longitude 120.35770 Photographer location: 2 feet south of south trail margin, with rebar and orange cap, tag #52 Target 1: green 1 meter metal fence post set 80 feet 8 inches west of rebar #52 Heading: 251 degrees Comment: Distant Ponderosa Pine (Pinus ponderosa) in valley floor, 95% burned. Prior to the fire, plant community in valley was Big Sagebrush (Artemisia tridentata), Serviceberry (Amelanchier alnifolia), native grasses (Bluebunch Wheatgrass, Pseudoroegneria spicata), non-native grasses (cheatgrass, Bromus tectorum, and bulbous bluegrass, Poa bulbosa), and non-native weeds (whitetop, Lepidium draba, and diffuse knapweed, Centaurea diffusa). Photo and compass reading taken 5 feet above rebar marker.

Photo Point 1: Balsamroot Trail, north trailhead May 11, 2015. Wildfire burned on June 28-29, 2015 10 months post fire Site 1A: Balsamroot Trail, north trailhead NAD83, latitude 47.45823 longitude 120.35770 Photographer location: 2 feet south of south trail margin, with rebar and orange cap, tag #52 Target 1: green 1 meter metal fence post set 80 feet 8 inches west of rebar #52 Heading: 251 degrees Comment: Distant Ponderosa Pine (Pinus ponderosa) in valley floor, 95% burned. Prior to the fire, plant community in valley was Big Sagebrush (Artemisia tridentata), Serviceberry (Amelanchier alnifolia), native grasses (Bluebunch Wheatgrass, Pseudoroegneria spicata), non-native grasses (cheatgrass, Bromus tectorum, and bulbous bluegrass, Poa bulbosa), and non-native weeds (whitetop, Lepidium draba, and diffuse knapweed, Centaurea diffusa). Photo and compass reading taken 5 feet above rebar marker.

Balsamroot Trail Post Wild-fire Photo Monitoring Project April 19, 2017 Citizen Science Project: Compare plant regrow density and diversity at 4 locations along a 0.5 mile section of the Balsamroot Trail Photo Point 3: Balsamroot Trail, north trailhead May 11, 2015. Wildfire burned on June 28-29, 20152 weeks post-fire

Post-2015 Wildfire in Wenatchee s North Foothills Citizen Science Project: Compare plant regrow density and diversity on both unplanted and planted areas in the north Foothills.

Become a weed alert volunteer for CDLT Citizen Science project: Volunteers submit geo-referenced photos of 15 noxious weed species seen in Wenatchee foothills so they can be eradicated prior to spreading.

Volunteers from Wenatchee Chapter, Washington Native Plant Society are Conducting a botany inventory survey at the newly acquired Chelan PUD s Coyote Dunes Natural Area.

Mission: To cultivate awareness, understanding, and stewardship of the Wenatchee River region by developing an active corps of well-informed community volunteers. http://www.wenatch eenaturalist.com/ Fall 50-hour course offered by Wenatchee Valley College Continuing Education

Wenatchee Naturalist - home-grown Citizen Scientists! Class year Class size # K-12 Teacher People with 20+ hours People with 50 + hours People with 100+ hours Total hours reporte d Spr 2012 21 6 17 10 1964 Fall 2012 26 5 16 5 7 1668 Spr2013 25 8 15 3 9 1422 Fall 2013 24 4 10 0 7 1375 Spr 2014 19 11 6 3 2 318 Fall 2014 16 0 8 4 1 397 Fall 2015 19 2 to date: 6 - to date: 1 526 TOTALS: 150 36 78 15 37 7670

How can you get involved as a Citizen Science Volunteer? Join a local non-profit conservation organization: Washington Native Plant Society North Central WA Audubon Society Chelan-Douglas Land Trust Register to participate with a Washington state project Washington Audubon (joint with WA Dept. of Fish & Wildlife UW Rare Care Program to monitor rare plants Register to participate in a US project: Cornell Lab of Ornithology offers 8 programs, including ebird, Nest watch, Great Backyard Bird Count and more Xerces Society Great Sunflower Project