Join the City Nature Challenge, April 29-May 2, 2022

For immediate release ‐ April 12, 2022

Nature Now

Contact: Micah Beasley, 919.707.9970. Images available upon request

City Nature Challenge 2022

If you walked out your door right now, how many species do you think you could observe? 5? 10? 20? It’s likely far more than you’d expect — and we have a great opportunity that can help you find out! The City Nature Challenge is an international, biodiversity-focused citizen science event that runs April 29 through May 2, 2022.

Anyone can join the City Nature Challenge! Visit North Carolina’s City Nature Challenge website for information about our five participating regions.

We urge all participants to follow current public health guidelines provided by the North Carolina Department of Health & Human Services.

A City Nature Challenge participant taking an observation photo.

How to Participate

In order to participate, you’ll need to head outdoors to find and photograph as many different wild species as possible in your local area.

You’ll upload your sightings through the iNaturalist app. (Register for a free iNaturalist account). You may also upload photos to the iNaturalist website.

This event aims to document the incredible biodiversity you can encounter in your everyday life, especially in urban and suburban areas where wild species are often overlooked.

The 2022 City Nature Challenge is expected to have over 300 participating cities on every continent!

Three Reasons to Participate in the City Nature Challenge

  1. Learn and Explore
    Learn more about the species that live around you. This event provides the perfect opportunity to explore! The iNaturalist platform has powerful image recognition software built into both the app and the website, so you can identify the species you photograph as you submit observations. In the past, participants have tried to document as many species as they could in their own yards or neighborhoods, while others traveled to interesting natural places in search of more adventure. Whatever your approach, any photo taken during the four days of the City Nature Challenge and uploaded to iNaturalist by Sunday, May 8, will count toward your local area’s observation totals.
  2. Support Science
    Veined skullcap. Photo: Jennifer Tredway.Veined skullcap. Photo: Jennifer Tredway.
    While the City Nature Challenge is fun for participants, there are other benefits that reach far beyond this event. All submissions made to iNaturalist are accessible by scientists who use data from the site in their research. By 2021, nearly 1,000 peer-reviewed publications had made use of iNaturalist observations. In 2019, one Museum volunteer participating in the Triangle Area photographed a seemingly random plant she saw in a park in Raleigh, NC. Her observation marked the rediscovery of the Veined Skullcap (Scutellaria nervosa), a plant that had not been seen in Wake County since 1967! Local native plant experts quickly put conservation efforts into place to help protect this species for future generations.
  3. Show Off North Carolina
    From the mountains to the sea, North Carolina is a beautiful state, rich in its biodiversity. You can help show it off on the international stage by participating in the City Nature Challenge this year. You can play a role in not only highlighting the natural world but promoting conservation of its species as well. Show us your most amazing discoveries along the way by sharing on social media: just tag us @naturalsciences.

The Museum and City Nature Challenge

A girl taking a photo of a monarch caterpillar on milkweed.

This is the sixth year the Museum has participated in the City Nature Challenge.

Staff at the Museum’s Prairie Ridge location have led the charge in the Triangle area since 2017, engaging hundreds of local citizen scientists in the challenge each year. This region has set an ambitious goal to surpass 20,000 observations this year (in 2021, 15,375 observations came from the Triangle area).

The Museum’s Whiteville branch joined the challenge last year and heads the NC Coastal Plain region. Last year, the region contributed 2,359 observations. Both branches are thrilled to be collaborating with North Carolina’s other three regions in order to observe and document as much of our state as possible this year!

In 2021, there were over 31,000 observations made in North Carolina. Can you help get us to 35,000 in 2022?

Museum Virtual Resources

Register for Join the City Nature Challenge on Tuesday, April 26, at 7:00pm for a virtual training program, oriented for participants age 13 and older, hosted by Museum staff. Learn how to participate in this event in North Carolina, including how to make iNaturalist observations, how to take a great photo for science, and where to look for species anywhere!

EcoExplore child taking an observation photo.

IMPORTANT NOTE about participants under 13: children under 13 are not allowed to create their own iNaturalist accounts, but they can participate by creating an ecoEXPLORE account.

You can also watch Prairie Ridge’s City Nature Challenge video tutorial on their Facebook page at any time.


For more information about our upcoming activities, conservation news and ground-breaking research, follow @NaturalSciences on InstagramTwitter and Facebook. Join the conversation with #visitNCMNS.

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