Posts by Kent McFarland

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Join Our Spring Wildflower Phenology Annotation Blitz!

April 3, 2020  |  Kent McFarland

Long-term flowering records initiated by Henry David Thoreau in 1852 have been used in Massachusetts to monitor phenological changes. You can be like Thoreau right from home! There are thousands of images of plants that observers like you have added to the Vermont Atlas of Life on iNaturalist. But, they have not been annotated so that we can easily track phenology.

March 2020 Photo-observation of the Month

April 1, 2020  |  Kent McFarland

Congratulations to coleen61 for winning the March 2020 Vermont Atlas of Life iNaturalist photo-observation of the month. The image of the rare Crested Caracara that made an appearance this month in Woodstock, Vermont won the adoration of naturalists this month.

January 2020 Photo-observation of the Month

February 3, 2020  |  Kent McFarland

Congratulations to Madison Alderman for winning the January 2020 Vermont Atlas of Life iNaturalist photo-observation of the month. The image of a Short-tailed Weasel cloaked in white and peering from a hole in a tree in Rutland, Vermont garnered the most votes.

Vermont eBirders Gather Big Bird Data During County Quest

January 20, 2020  |  Kent McFarland

From day one when eBirders reported an incredible 73 bird species on a cold winter day to a Say’s Phoebe, a rare visitor found in late November, Vermont birders scoured the state to discover as many bird species as possible during the 9th annual Vermont eBird County Quest, and set some records along the way.

Volunteers Help the Vermont Atlas of Life Build Biodiversity Big Data in 2019

January 2, 2020  |  Kent McFarland

From the first observation of 2019, a Barred Owl sitting on a deck, to a Christmas Fern laying on snow on the last day of the year, naturalists added over 100,000 biodiversity records to our rapidly growing database of life in Vermont.

November 2019 Photo-observation of the Month

December 2, 2019  |  Kent McFarland

Congratulations to Joshua Lincoln for winning the November 2019 Vermont Atlas of Life iNaturalist photo-observation of the month. The image of a ‘eastern or red’ Fox Sparrow (Passerella iliaca iliaca) in Waterbury, Vermont garnered the most votes.

A Lifetime of Beetles

December 1, 2019  |  Kent McFarland

A lifetime of work on the ground beetles of Vermont and New Hampshire, Carabidae of Vermont and New Hampshire by Ross T. Bell, Professor Emeritus of the University of Vermont with species maps produced by the Vermont Atlas of Life at VCE, is now available as a PDF.

iNaturalists Discover More New Moths for Vermont

October 3, 2019  |  Kent McFarland

Over 1,475 biologists and naturalists have contributed more than 51,000 moth photo-observations to the Vermont Atlas of Life on iNaturalist. Together, we’ve discovered over 100 new species for Vermont, and iNaturalists have done it again. two species new to Vermont were discovered and one species that was only known from a historical record was rediscovered.

Fly Species New for Vermont Discovered by iNaturalist

October 3, 2019  |  Kent McFarland

You don’t have to go far to help the Vermont Atlas of Life discover species new to Vermont. You just have to be observant. A random fly entering a car window turns out to be the first record for the species in Vermont.

Field Guide to October 2019

October 1, 2019  |  Kent McFarland

October is a month of change. The forested hills fade from green to a kaleidoscope of red and gold that dazzles the eyes. Here’s your field guide to some moments that you might not otherwise notice during these few precious weeks.

Tallying Vermont Moths One Image at a Time

September 18, 2019  |  Kent McFarland

There’s a new collection project that automatically gathers and presents all of Vermont moth data from iNaturalist in one easy place – Vermont Moths on iNaturalist. If you put a moth record in the Vermont Atlas of Life project on iNaturalist, or anywhere in iNaturalist – Vermont Moths will tally it.

Introduced Jumping Spider Spotted in Vermont for First Time

September 17, 2019  |  Kent McFarland

On June 10th Jasper Barnes, a wildlife biology student at the University of Vermont, snapped a photo of a tiny jumping spider near campus and shared it to the Vermont…