iNaturalist

5 of 5 Stars

iNaturalist is sort of like Pokémon Go for real animals and plants.

Pokémon Go for real animals and plants

It's a "citizen science" project that asks regular people to look for and report observations of wildlife (and wild plants, fungi, etc), submitting photo, sound or video evidence, wherever you happen to be: Out in the woods, on a farm, on an urban street, in your kitchen where you spot a spider under the sink. The idea is to get people looking everywhere, not just where expected, and crowd-source a map of where a species shows up over time.

For identifying what you're looking at, there's image-recognition software that can usually help narrow it down, and other users who might have more expertise than you at telling hummingbirds apart can look at your photo and say, "Oh, that's definitely an Anna's hummingbird."

Sometimes it gets confused, like when it told me a pigeon was a hawk, or gave me a list of wildlife that might be in snowy woods instead of trying to identify the tree.

told me a pigeon was a hawk

wildlife that might be in snowy woods

I got into it before the Covid-19 lockdowns, but ramped up my activity during 2020, when there wasn't anywhere to go except walking around outside.

Mobile App

The Android app streamlines the basic use case of posting an observation from your phone, and it uses the image-recognition AI to help you narrow it down.

I haven't used the iPhone app, but I assume it's similar.

I've tried a number of phone-based image editors for cropping and enhancing photos before uploading them, but the only one I've found that doesn't mangle location or time metadata is Image Toolbox.

Image Toolbox

Perspective

Before iNaturalist: "Wow, that yard is completely overrun with weeds!" (See also: "plant blindness.")

"plant blindness."

After iNaturalist: "Wow, that yard is completely overrun with stork's-bills and mallows! And a bunch of barley over there by the edge...Ooh, what are those tiny yellow flowers...?"

I've also gotten a lot better at recognizing the differences among local birds, too. I used to classify them as:

Now I can tell pigeons from doves, several types of sparrows from each other and finches, ducks from geese from coots from wigeons, starlings from blackbirds, and more.

Fun Facts on Ferals

descended from domesticated pigeons

Buildings serve as a nice substitute

feral peafowl population

trap and relocate a bunch of them

#

isn't a solid difference between a pigeon and a dove

— Kelson Vibber, 2025-10-11

External

iNaturalist

Available from:

App Store (iOS App)

Play Store (Android App)

Related posts:

Pigeon Watching

Web

iNaturalist

Nature

Science

Crowdsourcing

Android

iOS

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