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ISBN: PB: 9780300205671

ISBN: HB: 9780300178791

Yale University Press

June 2014

224 pp.

21x14 cm

11 black&white illus.

PB:
£12,99
QTY:
HB:
£18,99
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Categories:

Incidental Steward

Reflections on Citizen Science

A search for a radio-tagged Indiana bat roosting in the woods behind her house in New York's Hudson Valley led Akiko Busch to assorted other encounters with the natural world – local ecological monitoring projects, community-organized cleanup efforts, and data-driven citizen science research. Whether pulling up water chestnuts in the Hudson River, measuring beds of submerged aquatic vegetation, or searching out vernal pools, all illuminated the role of ordinary citizens as stewards of place. In this elegantly written book, Busch highlights factors that distinguish twenty-first-century citizen scientists from traditional amateur naturalists: a greater sense of urgency, helpful new technologies, and the expanded possibilities of crowdsourcing. The observations here look both to precisely recorded data sheets and to the impressionistic marginalia, scribbled asides, and side roads that often attend such unpredictable outings. While not a primer on the prescribed protocols of citizen science, the book combines vivid natural history, a deep sense of place, and reflection about our changing world. Musing on the expanding potential of citizen science, the author celebrates today's renewed volunteerism and the opportunities it offers for regaining a deep sense of connection to place.

About the Author

Akiko Busch is well known for her writings on design, culture, and the natural world. She was a contributing editor to "Metropolis" magazine for twenty years and has written three previous essay collections. She lives in the Hudson Valley.

Reviews

"Every once in a while a place finds someone to speak for it. The hero of 'The Incidental Steward' is the Hudson River and its valley – its woods and rocks, its schedules, changes, species, and mysteries. This book, gracious and intelligent, made me want to go look closely at the river, which I felt I had never seen properly before" – Alec Wilkinson, author of "The Ice Balloon"