Denver EcoFlora Project's Journal

Journal archives for May 2024

May 30, 2024

Results of 2024 Denver-Boulder City Nature Challenge are in!

The City Nature Challenge is a yearly event for folks in cities all over the world to observe and document biodiversity in their own backyards. To participate, people make observations of any organism – plant, animal, insect, and more – on iNaturalist for a few days in late April to early May. This is followed by a short identification phase—where a community of naturalists work on identifying all species observed.

In the Denver-Boulder Metro area, more than 4,500 observations were observed by nearly 400 people of almost 1,000 species! This year, our most observed species was American plum (Prunus americana). Fun species observed included black bear (Ursus americanus), beaver (Castor canadensis), summer tanager (Pirangra rubra), snowy egret (Egretta thrula), great horned owl (Bubo virginianus), and roundtip and front range twinpods (Physaria vitulifera and P. bellii). We even had 73 research-grade observations of 10 species that are listed as rare, endangered, or threatened by NatureServe or the US Fish and Wildlife Service. This effort to observe biodiversity also further enhanced our understanding of species distributions. For example, a graduate student at the University of Colorado, Denver found the first record of a parasitic orchid species (striped coralroot, Corallorhiza striata) at our own Chatfield Farms bioblitz!

For 2024’s global challenge, there were almost 2.5 million observations of over 65,000 species made by 83,000+ people from over 500 cities in ~50 countries around the world. Almost 4,000 of those species are considered rare, endangered, or threatened. The leading city for numbers of observations, species, and observers was La Paz, Bolivia with 165,000+ observations of more than 5,000 species! Congrats to La Paz!

Thank you to everyone who participated in this year’s City Nature Challenge. We are looking forward to participating with you next year for the 10-year anniversary of the 2025 City Nature Challenge!

Below are some incredible observations to celebarte!


@mylan


The most commonly observed species in this area, American plum, observed by a 'super observer' in our local City Nature Challenge
@phyllisholst


A species of rust fungus that infects junipers
@melspippin


striped coralroot
@mylan


Hybrid of a yellow-shafted and red-shafted flicker
@leslie_s


Summer Tanager
@christian_nunes

Posted on May 30, 2024 09:53 PM by alissa_iverson alissa_iverson | 0 comments | Leave a comment