Join us Friday April 26 (10-11am Pacific) for our next webinar! More information in "Project Updates" Registration Required. Also, this project recently migrated onto Zooniverse’s new frontend codebase and design. Check out this Talk post for more details.

Join us Friday April 26 (10-11am Pacific) for our next webinar! More information in "Project Updates" Registration Required. Also, this project recently migrated onto Zooniverse’s new frontend codebase and design. Check out this Talk post for more details.

Wildwatch Burrowing Owl

Will You Help Us Save Burrowing Owls?

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We need your help classifying burrowing owls and other species associated with them in field photos.

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Message from the researcher

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This project is crucial in monitoring burrowing owl populations in San Diego County,” said Colleen Wisinski, conservation program specialist, San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance. “We’d like to know more about the population dynamics in Otay Mesa—is it stable? Declining? Are chicks surviving in artificial burrows we construct for them? Our volunteers will be a huge help to parse the photo data.

Wildwatch Burrowing Owl

About Wildwatch Burrowing Owl

The western burrowing owl needs our help. Unusual among owl species, this pint-sized raptor lives in elaborate underground burrows. These owls cannot dig their own burrows, and instead “reuse” excavated dens dug by ground squirrels and other fossorial (burrowing) animals. With its penchant for open, native grasslands, the burrowing owl has been on a collision course with humans throughout much of Southern California. San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance is determined to help reverse the owl’s decline with effective, science-based solutions. Our Burrowing Owl Recovery Program takes a multi-prong, multiple-partner approach to better understand the ecology of these birds in San Diego County, which will help guide best conservation practices moving forward.

Wildwatch Burrowing Owl seeks to document the behaviors and developmental milestones of burrowing owl families “holed up” in Otay Mesa, CA. Motion-activated cameras are strategically positioned at burrow entrances to collect candid data.

We need your help classifying the images! Your efforts will give researchers a clearer understanding of burrowing owl ecology and behavior, as well as visitors (and predators) to the burrows. The information gathered will help land managers balance land use (development) and wildlife conservation.

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