Guyana - iNaturalist World Tour

It's Week 19 of the iNaturalist World Tour. First, lets take stock of the fact that we've made it through half of all the 253 countries we plan to visit on this tour. As the remainin ~125 countries become increasingly smaller or less visited we may mix up the formula of these posts a bit to keep things moving along smoothly, more on that soon. But for now, we're still in abreviated status quo mode because of the power shutoffs in Northern California. This week we'll visit Guyana and Haiti in the Neotropics, Kosovo in Europe, Senegal in Africa, tiny Macao nestled alongside China, tiny Reunion not far from Madagascar, and Iraq in the Middle East.



We begin in Guyana. Guyana sits between Venezuala and Suriname. While Venezuela and Suriname have Spanish and Dutch colonial pasts, Guyana was a British colony and is the only English speaking country in South America. The top @paul_prior. @cullen, @josh_vandermeulen, @hoppy1951, @birdernaturalist, @wjcrins, @toucan55, @neomorphus, @tobypcr, and @markconboy are other top observers. Most top observers are clustered in the interior of the country near the Brazilian border, but there is also a cluster around the capital of Georgetown along the coast.



The graph observations per month picked up in 2017 but has remained fairly jagged indicative of more visitors than residents.



@paul_prior is also the top identifier as well as the top observer. Other top identifiers include @jbroadhead, @johnascher, @john8, and @camilojotage.



What can we do to improve iNaturalist in Guyana? Please share your thoughts below.

@paul_prior @cullen @josh_vandermeulen @hoppy1951 @birdernaturalist @wjcrins @jbroadhead @johnascher @john8 @camilojotage

We’ll be back tomorrow in Kosovo!

Posted on 29 de outubro de 2019, 02:20 AM by loarie loarie

Comentários

We must continue to invite people to contribute to iNat in general, reminding them that it is simple and the importance of the platform, for example: I see on Facebook in wildlife groups that I follow, that people do not know that it exists, (colombia.inaturalist .org) and I try to sporadically link to the platform and my projects on it. Like "Birds of Colombia" "Hummingbird of the world", etc. In other words, it is necessary to disseminate the platform, to fill those gaps like those seen on the map of Guyana, to the north and south, since they are not totally unexplored.

Publicado por camilojotage mais de 4 anos antes

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