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This lounging crabeater seal from Argentina was one of over 1,250,000 observations made during the City Nature Challenge. (© María Regina Silva)
A beautifully patterned long-nosed snake photographed in the Bay Area. (© Tony Iwane)
This lorikeet, observed just outside of Melbourne, is a hybrid of two or more species. (© jdagg)
This duo of endangered blue-sided tree frogs was found in Costa Rica. (© Felipe Vega Con)
This flower photographed in Orange County, California is a critically endangered species found nowhere else on Earth. (© James Bailey)
A giant Australian cuttlefish cruises by a community scientist off the coast of Adelaide. (© David Muirhead)

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City Nature Challenge records over 1,250,000 wildlife observations in a single weekend

City Nature Challenge records over 1,250,000 wildlife observations in a single weekend

SAN FRANCISCO, CA (May 10, 2021) — In its sixth year, the annual City Nature Challenge—one of the world’s largest community science events—has surpassed 1,000,000 wildlife observations for the first time! Over the four-day event held last weekend, more than 52,000 people across six continents participated however they could—from attending socially distant wildlife surveys to finding the species in their own homes—to document the wondrous diversity of wild plants, animals, and fungi that share our planet using the free mobile app iNaturalist. Given the continued impact of COVID-19, this year’s Challenge forwent the competition component, focusing instead on providing a way for people to safely reconnect with nature and each other while contributing important biodiversity data from around the world.

Started in 2016 by the California Academy of Sciences and the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County as a friendly competition between San Francisco and Los Angeles metro areas, the Challenge has expanded to over 400 cities across 44 countries. This year’s Challenge broke every previous record, tallying over 1,250,000 observations; engaging more than 52,000 observers; and recording nearly 45,000 species worldwide, including over 2,100 rare, endangered, or threatened species. This year’s Challenge was made possible thanks to the creativity and adaptability of hundreds of individuals and partner organizations, who found novel ways of empowering their respective communities to safely participate despite COVID-19.

“We are thrilled to surpass one million observations for the first time,” says Alison Young, co-director of Community Science at the Academy and co-founder of the Challenge. “Especially after such a challenging year, it is heartening to see so many people from around the world safely coming together to experience the restorative power of nature and reach such a momentous milestone.”

See below for highlights from this year’s City Nature Challenge.

San Francisco Bay Area by the numbers

San Francisco Bay Area highlights

Highlights from around the Bay Area include a stunningly patterned long-nosed snake, a stern gaze from a great horned owl, the vulnerable and endemic Oakland mariposa lily, a prowling mountain lion caught on a camera trap, an otherworldly opalescent nudibranch, and a decaying endangered fin whale recently necropsied by the California Academy of Sciences and The Marine Mammal Center.

World by the numbers

World highlights

Highlights from around the U.S. and the world include a hummingbird in Washington hunkered down in its nest, a threatened giant Australian cuttlefish scuttling by off the coast of Adelaide, a lounging crabeater seal in Argentina, a critically endangered endemic flower in Orange County, a jaguar prowling around northern Bolivia, a duo of endangered blue-sided tree frogs in Costa Rica, a rare multispecies hybrid lorikeet in Australia, Honduras’s first record of a species of hairstreak butterfly, and the expansion of the voracious invasive emerald ash borer beetle in Denton County, Texas.

“From common plants to endangered amphibians, every observation helps us reconnect with nature and contributes important biodiversity data that enables scientists and managers to better understand and protect our planet,” Young says. “To collectively produce over a million wildlife observations in a single long weekend is a truly remarkable feat—one we look forward to topping during next year’s Challenge!”