The February 2013 issue of Scientific American has a piece on citizen science and understanding things like bird migration... more here and much more in the issue.
(sorry for the use of a Flash player - its all they offered)
The February 2013 issue of Scientific American has a piece on citizen science and understanding things like bird migration... more here and much more in the issue.
snip
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Nearly as amazing, amateur scientists (maybe some of you reading this story) played a large part in creating them. Thousands of volunteers with the eBird project have been collecting and sharing up to millions of bird observations each month for the past 10 years. Without such armies of laypeople as observers, such data sets would otherwise be out of reach or impossible to obtain. (For more about this burgeoning field and its impact on science, read Hillary Rosner's feature, “Data on Wings,” in the February issue of Scientific American.) Those eBird data have been combined with remote-sensed information on climate, habitat, night flight calls and other variables to generate spatiotemporal exploratory models (aka migration forecasts) as well as more static “birdcasts” (weekly migration forecasts for birders focusing on seasonal species and the impact of weather), estimates of how far birds fly, and myriad other insights.
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for the paranoid fringe
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