Spot-A-Bee, the Citizen Science App about bees and plants in cities, is now also available in Welsh. Croeso!

Wednesday, 27 January 2021 17:18

We're delighted to announce that the Spot-A-Bee Citizen Science app is now available to Welsh speakers! The project aims to determine which plants, flowers, and trees in cities and urban areas benefit our most popular pollinators: the bees.

The Spot-A-Bee app allows you to observe and document any flowers, shrubs, climbers, or trees and the bees on them. Additionally, it contains useful information on those plants and the most common bee species in the UK.

Inclusion in Citizen Science

At SPOTTERON, we value the inclusion of minorities. We are always interested in making the Citizen Science apps running on our platform available to everybody in the world, even if these might be smaller parts of a population.
Making an app in Welsh is, for us, a further step towards that kind of inclusion. We hope that by doing that, more people who are using the app already further not only their interest in the app's topic itself but also appreciate the beauty of the Welsh language and its cultural importance. We also hope that Welsh speakers will find it easier and more appealing to join the app in their native tongue and become new members of this great community of Citizen Scientists.

Sadly, Google and Apple do not support local languages like Welsh in their app stores (yet). In a world where we have all the technological means to cater to smaller groups of the population and ethnic minorities, we should exploit these possibilities more and show that we care.

Local Languages open up possibilities

We look forward to including even more languages in the future, especially "exotic" ones and those that require non-Latin typeset such as Cyrillic (more on that soon!).

The Welsh version of the Spot-A-Bee App was made possible by working closely with our partners, The University of Glasgow and Cardiff University.

Croeso i deulu SPOTTERON!

 beeSeperator

Find the citizen science app in your app store:

Android AppStoreBadge 150x45px IOS AppStoreBadge 150x45px

or open the interactive map here: Open Spot-A-Bee

Example Horizon Europe / Horizon 2020 Collaborations

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Horizon 2020 Invasive Species Monitoring App

The IPM-Popillia Horizon 2020 project aims to address the challenge of a new risk to plant health in Europe's agriculture and food safety: the invasion of the Japanese Beetle, Popillia japonica. This invasive species was introduced accidentally to mainland Europe in 2014 and can quickly spread by transportation and trade. As a species with a wide range of feeding plants, P. japonica threatens the entire agricultural sector, urban landscapes, and biodiversity in invaded areas.

Learn more about
IPM Popillia | Integrated Pest Management of the Japanese Beetle
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Horizon Europe Citizen Science App

EFFECTIVE, a Horizon Europe initiative, targets the emerging threat to the EU's Mediterranean Blue Natural Capital. By leveraging advanced science, technological nature-based solutions, digitalization, and social implication, the project aims to develop a comprehensive scientific knowledge base and practical guidance for the application of Ecosystem-Based Management to promote large-scale marine protected areas establishment in the European seas.

Learn more about
EFFECTIVE | Protection and Restoration Management of Mediterranean Marine Protected Areas
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Horizon Europe Citizen Science App

TRANSEATION, funded by Horizon Europe, aims to validate a new level of ecosystem-based management by integrating social implication digitalization and nature-based solutions to safeguard and restore marine ecosystem health and services. The project focuses on demonstrating the effectiveness of marine and coastal hybrid blue-grey infrastructures and developing digital tools for monitoring, analysis, and social involvement, addressing societal challenges and promoting sustainable management practices.

Learn more about
TRANSEATION | Advancements through Hybrid Blue-Grey Infrastructures in Marine and Coastal Areas
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Horizon 2020 Citizen Social Science App

In Europe and globally, substantial numbers of young people are at risk of social exclusion. Therefore, there is a pressing need to develop more knowledge and innovation to create inclusive and youth-friendly societies. The Horizon 2020 R&I Project YouCount contributes to these needs by developing 'actionable' knowledge for social inclusion of disadvantaged youths in the European Union and creating better means for social inclusion through citizen social science.

Learn more about
YouCount | Youth Citizen Science
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Horizon 2020 Citizen Science App

The impact of plastic pollution on soil health is largely unknown. However, the amounts of plastic entering soils are equal to or possibly even more significant than those entering our rivers, seas, and oceans. MINAGRIS, an EU Horizon 2020 funded project, will investigate how plastic affects soil biodiversity, soil functions, associated ecosystem services, and agricultural productivity.
Learn more about
MINAGRIS | Micro and Nanoplastics in Agricultural Soils
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Health Citizen Science App
University Medical Center Schleswig-Holstein, Kiel University Institute of Medical Psychology and Medical Sociology

StreetMind contributes to a better understanding how environmental factors like urbanicity or climate change influence how individuals across Europe and the world feel, act, and behave. Participants make up their minds with fellow citizens and scientists and share their daily experiences of their surroundings and the environment where they live, work, and interact.

Learn more about
StreetMind

Short News

  • New study from BiciZen project: "BiciZen: Lessons in the Development of a Crowdsourcing Mobile App to Make Cities More Bikeable" published in Journal of Participatory Research Methods. More studies available under the publication page here.

    in Shortnews
  • Roadkill project has made wonderful short videos for the citizen scientists! The videos include the Roadkill App functions regarding how to confirm & comment on the spots and how to best take the photos for the project. The videos (in German) are available in the "Österreich forscht" blog here. 

    in Shortnews

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