Community Science
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Uniting People & Science for Conservation
The Harris Center's community science programs train volunteers to gather ecological data aimed at protecting and restoring wildlife — and wild places — in southwest New Hampshire.
Salamander Crossing Brigades
On the first warm rainy nights of spring, thousands of amphibians migrate from woods to wetlands in a natural phenomenon known as “Big Night.” It’s a perilous journey, especially when they must cross busy roads to reach their breeding pools. To reduce the risk of roadkill, we train community scientists to serve on Salamander Crossing Brigades at amphibian road crossings throughout the Monadnock Region.
Vernal Pool Project
Vernal pools are temporary woodland ponds that serve as important amphibian breeding habitat. Because they’re small and seasonal, they’re especially vulnerable to development. We can protect these sensitive ecosystems, but only if we know where they are! Our Vernal Pool Project volunteers find and record data on vernal pools, with special focus on public and conserved lands.
Project Nighthawk
Common Nighthawks (Chordeiles minor) were once, well, common in New Hampshire – particularly in cities, where they nested on gravel roofs and hunted insects attracted to street lights. Over the past twenty years, however, nesting nighthawks have disappeared from all but a few New Hampshire towns. In partnership with New Hampshire Audubon, the Harris Center coordinates volunteer monitoring of the state-endangered Common Nighthawk in Keene, one of the last places in the Granite State where this acrobatic insectivore still breeds.
SPARCnet
The Harris Center maintains a series of study plots as part of SPARCnet, a regional research effort aimed at understanding the effects of climate change on woodland salamanders. With the help of students and community scientists, we survey the plots for salamanders each spring and fall.
Butterfly Monitoring
Each summer, the Harris Center works with community scientists to survey monarchs and other butterfly species as part of long-term monitoring efforts developed by the North American Butterfly Association, the Monarch Joint Venture, and other invertebrate conservation groups.
iNaturalist
Our SuperSanctuary of protected lands is brimming with biodiversity. Join this long-term effort to document and identify the many organisms that occur on our lands using the popular community science platform, iNaturalist.
Contact Us
For more information on these and other community science projects or to volunteer, please contact Science Director Brett Amy Thelen by email.