"Look Mom!" All photos by D. Alkire |
I love to indulge their curiosity, and it is great to have a
tool in my pocket that can quickly point me in the right direction with random
insect, flower, or mushroom identification.
Sometimes the identification is immediate! There are several phone apps
out there for this purpose. I have the
most experience with Seek and iNaturalist.
I like that iNaturalist allows me to help scientists with
collecting data, and I like that using Seek with my iNaturalist account makes
it fun and accessible. Seek even has
monthly challenges, so I can keep going outside and practice being observant in
nature!
I'm almost done with the equinox challenge, so close! |
I was curious about the huge bumps I kept finding in the thistles in my back yard. I observed an actual thistle gall fly in my yard a couple of years later! |
Have you ever seen one of these while out and about? |
There are times when the program can’t quite figure out the species you are looking at, and I have had a few rare instances where it is hilariously wrong. As someone who doesn’t know most insect or plant names off the top of my head, the information given is usually a really helpful starting point for more research, even if it isn’t perfect.
This is a tree. |
No plant or insect identification app is perfect even if they are improving, see: https://www.newscientist.com/article/2367068-apps-that-identify-plants-can-be-as-little-as-4-per-cent-accurate/.
There have been multiple studies conducted and I certainly don’t want to give the impression that they should be the first and only answer you turn to! See: https://besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/pan3.10460 and one more: https://www.canr.msu.edu/news/plant-identification-theres-an-app-for-that-actually-several I would not go foraging armed only with Seek to tell me if a mushroom is edible. Being able to tell my kid that the lovely purple flower we found on a hike is likely a palm leaf mistflower is excellent for my phone, though! I was heartened to read that although in some cases the identifications can be very inaccurate, in one study, across five popular applications, 85% of images were identified correctly in the top five suggestions, and 69% were correct with the first suggestion. Not bad!
I guess western honey bees like my yard! |
If you want to try Seek out for yourself, see https://www.inaturalist.org/pages/seek_app.