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If you find yourself counting the number of frogs in your local pond, noticing the date of the first flower on your favourite tree or waiting for the arrival of migrant birds, you are potentially a citizen scientist.

People across the world are increasingly turning their hobby of watching birds or taking a walk in the wild or even gardening into an endeavour to collect important ecological information. Citizen Scientists the world over collect data on plants, birds, insects and frogs; data that are crucial to our understanding of the natural world and how it is changing.
Who is citizen scientist?
A citizen scientist is a volunteer
who collects and/or processes
 data as a part of a
scientific enquiry

Well known citizen science programmes in other countries include the Christmas Bird Count and the Great Sunflower Project in the USA and the UK Phenology Network. Tens of thousands of volunteers take part in these projects.

Citizen science is currently in its early stages in India, with only a handful of existing volunteer-based scientific projects. The rise of the internet, and the growing interest in ecology and the environment, provides an opportunity for all of us to work together to collect information to better understand the natural world around us.

The Citizen Science Programme of the National Centre for Biological Sciences currently runs two volunteer-based projects.

MigrantWatch was started in August 2007 to monitor the timing of migration of birds to and from the Indian subcontinent. It currently has around 1,000 registered participants from across India. MigrantWatch is run in collaboration with Indian Birds journal. Do join us in this effort to document bird migration!

SeasonWatch monitors the timing of flowering, fruiting, and leafing of plants. Volunteers register one or more individual trees, and monitor them at frequent intervals. We expect to launch the project in end-January 2010. Click here for more information.

In addition, on 15 January 2010, we ran an intense, one-day project to monitor how animals respond to a solar eclipse. More details are on EclipseWatch.

For further information, please contact:
Uttara Mendiratta
Coordinator, Citizen Science Programme
National Centre for Biological Sciences
GKVK Campus, Bellary Road
Bangalore 560 065
Email: citizenscience(at)ncbs.res.in