Joining the iNaturalist Network

  1. What is the iNaturalist Network?
  2. Network Mission and Key Values
  3. How to become a Network Member
  4. Advantages of Network Membership
  5. Network Member Responsibilities
  6. Branded Gateway localization details

1. What is the iNaturalist Network?

iNaturalist is a global community of naturalists, scientists, and members of the public sharing wildlife sightings to teach one another about the natural world while creating high quality citizen science data for science and conservation. The iNaturalist technology infrastructure and open source software is jointly supported by the California Academy of Sciences and the National Geographic Society.

The iNaturalist Network is a framework for localizing the iNaturalist community, typically on national or regional scales. A geographically restricted focus can help make nature more accessible in different parts of the world to the public and facilitate the availability of sensitive biodiversity data for regional science and conservation. The Network operates as a series of separate branded gateways of the iNaturalist software locally configured and led by partner organizations active in their country or region. These gateways are connected with shared infrastructure that operates across the network.

The Network therefore allows participating members to (1) help provide a biodiversity citizen science experience localized to their country or region and (2) responsibly make sensitive biodiversity data available locally for science and conservation, but (3) without fragmenting the global community and scope of the iNaturalist project.

To see the current list of members, please refer to the main page about the iNaturalist Network.

2. Network Mission and Key Values

The mission of the Network is to connect people to nature through technology with the specific goals of:

  1. Increasing natural history literacy, understanding, and interest among the public.
  2. Generating high-quality biodiversity data for science and conservation.
  3. Increasing the excellence and international coverage of the Network through new memberships with effective organizations.

The key values of the Network include:

  1. Community -- We value community over data generated by the network. If we grow vibrant, local, grassroots communities of naturalists across the globe, then biodiversity monitoring capacity will be an emergent property. But if we focus on generating an archive of biodiversity data while ignoring real people our efforts won’t be sustainable.
  2. Open Access -- Our software is open source, data generated by the project is generally visible to the public (with the exception of sensitive species data and private user data), and released under a Creative Commons license by default (though participants can opt-out of such licensing if they choose).
  3. Interoperability -- Think locally, act globally. While we make efforts to localize participant’s experiences, we believe that social networks and crowdsourcing efforts benefit from large, connected communities and databases. We strive to build a global community of naturalists and scalable streams of biodiversity data that can contribute to science and policy globally. Presently, this means all network members share one underlying taxonomy that cannot be configured independently for different geographic areas.

3. How to Become a Network Member

iNaturalist will consider organizations for membership that share the Network’s key values and are strategic to its mission. Potential members should be able to demonstrate that their organization:

  1. Is positioned to successfully coordinate iNaturalist activities in their geographic area by partnering with relevant educational, research, and governmental institutions.
  2. Can carry out the Network Member responsibilities described below.
  3. Can participate in the iNaturalist Network Member Committee to steer the development of the iNaturalist Network.

If your organization is interested in joining the Network, please review the iNaturalist Network Membership Application and contact us if you have questions.

4. Advantages of Network Membership

  1. Visibility in the rapidly growing iNaturalist project by coordinating activities within your host nation and associating your organization with the global iNaturalist effort.
  2. Access to private data generated through your branded gateway including the locations of sensitive species and participant’s private contact information.
  3. Influence in the development of the iNaturalist Network as part of the Membership Committee.

5. Network Member Responsibilities

Community building responsibilities

  1. Help grow the number of users, observations, identifications, and species count from within your host nation through active use and promotion of the iNaturalist platform and the coordination of outreach activities.
  2. Promote and model community behavior in accordance with the community guidelines.

Data steward responsibilities

  1. Responsibly steward sensitive data contributed through your gateway while striving to make these data available for science and conservation.

Technical responsibilities

    There are two distinct options:
  1. Register and secure a unique domain (e.g. inaturalist.nz, inaturalist.ca, naturalista.mx) in the name of the member organization. In this case, your organization is responsible for registering the domain, obtaining a SSL certificate, paying the fees associated with those registrations, configuring DNS as requested by iNaturalist, and maintaining the registrations (so it doesn't lapse and become unreachable). It may not be possible to support sign in with all third party options (e.g. Google and Facebook) if using a custom domain.
  2. -or-
  3. Use a subdomain of iNaturalist (e.g. colombia.inaturalist.org). In this case, iNaturalist assumes all of the responsibilities described above. You can still customize the home page, language, footer links, etc. This option is strongly recommended for ease of implementation.

Language responsibilities (where applicable)

  1. Help maintain and approve the relevant translation of the iNaturalist software in order to maintain 75% translation for web, iOS, and Android apps.
  2. If needed, hire a skilled bi/multilingual developer who can assist with changes needed to the iNaturalist open source software (web, iOS, and Android) for translations from English to work properly.
  3. Provide support in the relevant language(s) through writing and adapting documentation, training a community of fluent curators, and responding to support inquiries (via a google group, facebook page, twitter account, blog etc.) in the relevant language(s).

Geographic responsibilities

  1. Help assess and maintain relevant municipality boundaries.
  2. Help assess and maintain relevant protected area boundaries.

Flora and fauna responsibilities

  1. Help assess and maintain conservation statuses.
  2. Help assess and maintain local common names for organisms in the relevant languages.
  3. Help assess and maintain species checklists including native/introduced status and presence/absence.

Network responsibilities

  1. Correspond with iNaturalist Network Members in English.
  2. Attend quarterly virtual meetings.
  3. Submit an annual report.

6. Branded Gateway Localization Details

The iNaturalist technology platform consists of a web application, an iPhone application, and an Android application which can each be configured as a branded gateway. While these platforms are all under active development, their current localization capacity is described here. Future development will continue to seek this balance gateway localization with facilitating interoperability across the network.

Gateway website localization

Each gateway website is configured with custom domains such as naturalista.mx, custom logos, languages, home pages, footers and static pages (about, help, etc.).

The network keeps track of the gateway that participants use to sign up. Participants ‘belong’ to the gateway through which they signed up meaning the Network Member is responsible for stewarding the participants' contact information. It is also possible for users to change their affiliation in their account settings. Participants' dashboards and email updates are localized to their gateway accordingly.

Pages for browsing observations are localized to filter observations by the spatial extent of the gateway (place filters can easily be removed by the user to search globally). All observations from users affiliated with a gateway are shared with the Network Member, meaning they are responsible for stewarding the sensitive location data for coordinates obscured from public view for either user privacy or protected species.

Pages for viewing and searching for organisms are localized to highlight species occurring within the spatial extent of each gateway.

This includes local names, the native/introduced status and conservation status of organisms.

The project overview page and project search is configured to highlight projects from within the gateway’s spatial extent.

The people page and people search is configured to highlight participants belonging to each gateway.

The places page and places search are configured highlight places found within the spatial extent of the gateway.

The guides overview page is configured to highlight guides from within the gateway’s spatial extent.

Mobile application localization

Because iOS and Android mobile apps must be individually approved when published to the iTunes and Google Play stores, it is impractical to maintain separate mobile apps for each branded gateway.

However, the iNaturalist iOS and Android apps have been localized as follows. When the iNaturalist app is launched on a device, the app checks the country in which the device is registered. If the participant is using the app in one of the Network Member areas, they are prompted to affiliate their account with the corresponding Network Member site. You can read more about account affiliation here.

Revised on 01 de julio de 2023 by loarie loarie
Vida Silvestre es una entidad asociada a la Organización Mundial de Conservación