The Chicago Field Museum partners with the community on a variety of science projects, including an effort to restore the Eastern Monarch Butterfly population (which has declined 80% in the past two decades). We sit down with Mark Johnston and Karen Klinger, GIS analysts for the museum, and discuss how they employ community science to gather data, restore habitats, and raise awareness of conservation issues in Chicago and beyond.
Additional resourcesKeeping food secure with Napa County
Season 4 trailer
Field Snack #4: The Fieldwork Handbook
Horticulture mapping at the Desert Botanical Garden
Something fishy: monitoring salmon populations to protect watersheds
A community effort: monitoring rangelands in Tanzania
Something in the water: monitoring cyanobacteria with mobile GIS
Conserving Atlanta’s tree canopy: a conversation with Trees Atlanta
Mapping seaside: Protecting sea turtles with GIS
Field Notes Season 3
Field Snack #3: Farewell, 2022
Transforming the Oldham County Water District with GNSS
Best practices for GNSS data collection
Field Snack #2: Covering the basics of high-accuracy data collection
From the ground level: streamlining city workflows with field apps
Locate, route, respond: navigating to utility assets with mobile maps
Live from San Diego: UC 2022
Field Snack #1: User Conference 2022
Disinfected data: keeping classrooms clean during a pandemic
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