Introducing the apps: The Tea Bag Index

Thursday, 17 October 2019 18:20

In the Tea Bag Index Citizen Science App, everything is about soil. Various observation categories are ready to participate in, from easy soil classification and testing to the well-known method of burying and weighting teabags to measure the decay rate of plants. Citizen Scientists are welcome to participate worldwide and contribute to improving climate models and soil research.

Drinking tea for the climate?

The Tea Bag Index (TBI) collects data on soil observations and in particular on the dynamics of soil decomposition. The degradation of organic matter in the soil is part of the global carbon cycle, which provides information about the biological activity of the soil and is therefore important for climate change. Changes in carbon content in soil can both exacerbate and mitigate climate change.

The idea is simple:

You bury a tea bag (Lipton green tea or rooibos) and dig it out again about three months later. During this time, the tea leaves inside the teabag decompose and, depending on the grade of decomposition, provide us with information on what happens to the plant material in the soil.

This method was developed and successfully tested by a group of scientists from the Utrecht Univeristy, the Umeå University, the Netherlands Institute of Ecology, and the AGES - Austrian Agency for Health and Food Safety, so that the experiment is now carried out in many different schools around the world.

With this tested and established method, the decay rate of the plant material in the soil can be measured and climate models can be improved by that data.

The first tea bags were already buried in 2010. Since then, the initiators have developed and improved the method. The project was well-received by the media, was awarded several prizes, and went global in 2016. 

In 2017, Lipton changed the material of its teabags from woven nylon to non-woven PET bags. Therefore a new version of the TeaBagIndex had to be started because the new material could affect the measurement data. Now it is possible to enter data from both types of bags, as long as you specify them exactly.

The Tea Bag Index is now part of several projects, including Teatime4schools, where students bury tea bags and examine the dynamics of soil degradation.
There are already 150 schools involved in this project throughout Austria, and with the SPOTTERON Tea Bag Index app, they have the perfect tool for this project.

Our partner AGES just released a great new video featuring the Tea Bag Index citizen science app:

 

Official project website: http://www.teatime4science.org

Download and try the app here:

Android: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.spotteron.teabagindex
IOS: https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/tea-bag-index-spotteron/id1465181150
Web-App for the browser: https://www.spotteron.com/teabagindex

Projects & Apps open for Co-Use on SPOTTERON

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Social initiative Data Collection App
SPOTTERON

ArtSpots is a community-built art atlas. Through the App, people interested in various art forms like street art, historical or contemporary art, photography, architecture, and more can put their art observations on the map and discover art spots in their city or while travelling. The art community in the App allows exchanging with other like-minded people and contributing to a worldwide art collection.
Learn more about
ArtSpots
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Horizon Europe Citizen Science App

With the COSEA App, Citizen Scientists can observe marine environments, document coastal habitats or species, and report on pollution, infrastructure and the blue economy. Their contributions on the map and activity in the app will help scientists better understand the impacts and drivers of marine factors to protect and foster a healthy relationship between humans and seas.

Learn more about
COSEA | Collaboration for Effective Sea Action
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Environmental Citizen Science, Data Collection App
SPOTTERON

NatureSpots is a non-commercial and free project to discover nature together. In the app, nature photos and sightings of animals, plants or mushrooms can be shared with the community on the map. The app is a new initiative for observing nature and taking part is very simple and straightforward. The app is free of advertising, does not track users and takes digital privacy seriously.

Learn more about
NatureSpots
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Social initiative Community Engagement App
SPOTTERON

The new citizen participation uses "Citizen Science" in their hometown and nationwide to get User's feedback on places. As a result, citizens are empowered to become active in a city worth living in to collect and share data themselves and to interact with scientists. This enables them to recognize the consequences of sealing, heat, water shortages, and a lack of biodiversity, and generally, how places in their own environment affect us all.

Learn more about
CIVO Citizen Voice
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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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Environmental Community Engagement App

Fridays for Future see itself as a horizontal, grassroots grassroots movement that acts apolitically and refers to science for the facts. To engage the global population more, this app was developed using SPOTTERON. The aim is to find out how the population perceives the climate crisis and which positive and negative emotions are associated with specific topics related to biodiversity and climate crisis.

Learn more about
FRIDAYS FOR FUTURE - Climate App

Are you interested in co-using existing Apps? Get in Contact!

Get in contact for co-use here

 

 

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