11-year-old QuestaGame player co-authors scientific paper

An amazing QuestaGame player has become a co-author of a scientific paper about a rare species of Australian pygmy grasshopper he found while playing QuestaGame.

He's 11 years old (and made the observation when he was 8).

David Haynes of Earth Guardians (QuestaGame) interviews him here. Congrats to all the scientists involved!

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“You don’t need to wait till you’re a scientist or have a PhD to contribute to biodiversity research or even biosecurity,” says the 11-year-old Griffin.

In this video Griffin shares highlights of his nature adventures. He also shares his top tips to try out at home - so that we can all get a little better at protecting life on Earth.

You can also join Griffin on several video adventures:

Things that sting - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LwtzhH7wNKQ&t

Beetles and Bugs - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wSO8lSmr4Vk&t

A duck pond adventure - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y_ZNSSlxn_Y&t

Something ImportANT - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bm_5O4e-Nus&t 

Make a light sheet! - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pLB9hHEFEbI&t

All the photos and video used in the interview were supplied by Griffin.

Music: Energy from Bensound.com.

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We are all Earth Guardians. The time has come to unleash the power of humanity – every single one of us. Are you ready to help protect life on Earth?

Join the adventure. Play the world's first mobile game that takes you outdoors to discover, map and ultimately help protect life on our planet. Your sightings contribute to real research and conservation.

Play QuestaGame: https://questagame.com/ 

Share your biodiversity expertise. Help identify species and you can earn donations for an organisation of your choice. Test your knowledge at the Bio-Expertise Engine: https://bee.questagame.com/

Connect with Earth Guardians:

Website - https://www.earthguardians.life/

Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/EarthGuardians.Life

Arachnology Magazine - Spiders will Never Look the Same Again

Many QuestaGame players are discovering spiders for the first time. Sure, they’ve seen spiders before. But many have not really seen spiders before. That is, they’ve never looked closely and noticed just how remarkable they are.

Arachnology magazine, which features QuestaGame in its latest issues, is a great way to discover and learn more about spiders. Once you have a read, trust us, you’ll never see spiders in the same way again.

Arachnids are also one of the most popular categories on QuestaGame.

“Spiders and moths are the categories people get most excited about,” says Mallika Robinson, co-founder and board member of QuestaGame. “They’re the categories where you’re most likely to discover a previously undescribed species.”

So keep your eyes peeled for these eight-legged miracles, whether you discover them outdoors (or indoors!), or in the pages of Arachnology magazine. Once you really see them, you may wonder why you didn’t pay more attention earlier.

Tips for great QuestaGame sightings at home

Dr Penelope Mills
School of Biological Sciences
The University of Queensland

Although many of us find ourselves stuck at home or restricted in where we can go, there are still plenty of specimens to photograph for your QG sightings if you know where and how to look:

• Explore your backyard/garden. Even a small backyard will have a multitude of small invertebrates (insects, spiders etc) for you to photograph. Try to get multiple, close-up angles for each specimen to help the experts id your sightings. A clip-on macrolens for your phone works well for taking photos of smaller subjects.

• No backyard? No worries! Outside (and inside) lights will attract moths and other nocturnal invertebrates at night.

• Put out plastic plates (white or yellow work best) to attract invertebrates.

• Hang out a white sheet/white cloth to attract invertebrates. An old tea towel should also work. You could get inventive and turn it into a light sheet to attract more specimens at night.

• When out for your daily exercise around the block, photograph animals (and plants if not cultivated) that are out and about along the footpaths.

• Check the outside of buildings (no trespassing though!). I spot plenty of animals resting on vertical walls and other vertical structures as I walk past them.

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Dr. Penelope Mills

Dr. Penelope Mills

Get close-ups!

Get close-ups!

How my class uses QuestaGame for home education during Covid19

By Greg McCroary
Teacher
Bundanoon Public School

OUR OUTDOOR EDUCATION PROGRAM BEFORE COVID19

Bundanoon Public School has been developing a practical and meaningful outdoor education program.  Our public schools should provide outdoor education facilities promoting sustainable practices within the broader community including the utilisation of school grounds as a network of habitat stepping stones in a nationwide wildlife corridor enhancing Australia’s unique biodiversity.

Greg McCroary

Greg McCroary

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In normal times, our students regularly undertake flora and fauna surveys to see what shares our space. Recorded observations guide future planning and improvements to our school grounds as a sustainability and outdoor education facility. With guidance from horticultural and bush regeneration experts, selective native plant species propagation will provide year round habitat for the different species known to frequent the school grounds and targeted threatened local species that remain absent in surveys. Monitoring will allow us to assess the effectiveness and suitability of our habitat for mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians and invertebrates for an increased biodiversity in school grounds.

BUT WHAT ABOUT DURING THE COVID19 PANDEMIC & STAY-AT-HOME ISOLATION?

Self-guided, outdoor education, citizen science activity during home learning?
QuestaGame. 

Making a real contribution to scientific data?
QuestaGame. 

Continuing our Outdoor Education Program?
QuestaGame.

Too easy!

If students experience nature they learn to appreciate it. If they appreciate it they want to conserve it. As teachers, we need to provide that experience to promote sustainably minded and environmentally aware citizens of tomorrow. The School Bioquest is a simple and engaging way to gain that experience. All while getting my students away from a desk and outdoors on a field trip in their own backyards.

INTEGRATING QUESTAGAME INTO THE HOME LEARNING PROGRAM

ART: Photography skills, perspective, framing, cropping and selection of quality images…

NUMERACY: Understanding 3D objects have different views, mapping, data collection, graphing, scale, measurement…

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SCIENCE: Taxonomy and labelling, experiments (e.g. what visits a piece of fruit left in the garden? What if you change the fruit? Change the position? etc.), ecosystems, habitats, microclimates…

LITERACY: Information reports, field note writing, story prompt & stimulus, staying safe guidelines, public speaking, filming, reporting, scripts for nature documentaries…

GEOGRAPHY: develop knowledge and understanding of the features and characteristics of places and environments across a range of scales

Free, engaging and meaningful quality teaching at home. Why not?

DATA STILL SHARED FOR SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH AND CONSERVATION

Now the observations are coming from around the students’ homes. But the sightings data are still shared with national and global biodiversity databases (via CSIRO) for scientific research and conservation. All of our catalogued species sightings are available to researchers via the Atlas of Living Australia’s database providing a growing range and distribution map of Australian species.      

Earth Guardians to Launch Equity Crowdfund

New Australian legislation allows public to invest as Earth Guardians creates biodiversity conservation marketplace.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

As Australian politicians and activists debate how best to slow the mass extinction of species, an Australia-based tech company will be rebelling against extinction in another way: 

The free market economy.

Earth Guardians, and its will known award-winning social enterprise, QuestaGame, will be launching an equity crowdfund to allow Australian investors to buy shares in a company harnessing the power of free markets, technology and the community, to protect life on our planet.

“It’s an exciting moment, many years in the making,” says Andrew Robinson, co-founder and Chair of Earth Guardians. “We’ve finally cracked a scalable revenue model that can unleash market forces to have a significant global impact on biodiversity conservation.”

QuestaGame BioQuests are starting to appear in mainstream locations.

QuestaGame BioQuests are starting to appear in mainstream locations.

As part of its expansion, Earth Guardians will be releasing a new, more mainstream app called Guardians of Life, which includes enhanced augmented reality (AR) capabilities to enhance the gameplay, generate more accurate data, stimulate learning, and reward players for their achievements in the field. 

Global gaming is estimated to be a $150 billion market.

Over the last several years, the company has experienced significant growth in participation, revenue and job creation. Its unique revenue model involves refining the biodiversity data collected by players, so that the data is useful to a wide variety of customers - from biosecurity to agriculture, eco-tourism and education.

“With QuestaGame’s technology and our unique BioSmart Expertise Engine,” says Robinson, “we’re seeing a scalable way to radically transform humanity’s connection to nature and create a new generation of environmental custodians; which is absolutely critical given the high rate of extinction we’re seeing today.”

Even some large corporates have begun using QuestaGame’s outdoor team-based gameplay as a tool for team-building, employee well-being, and a clear measure of environmental awareness.

Revenue, meanwhile, is shared with participating organisations via Earth Guardians “Pays to Know Nature” program, which means players can earn a part of the revenue based on how much they contribute to refining the data.

To fund the next stage of growth and to scale revenue and impact, Earth Guardians has decided to raise investment through equity crowdfunding.

Equity crowdfunding, which became licensed in Australia in 2018, is a new way for Australian companies to raise investment from the public, allowing businesses to bring communities on their journey of growth. 

“It’s an exhilarating experience to play QuestaGame and learn you’ve contributed a sighting that’s valuable to conservation efforts,” says David Haynes, an early contributor to the company. “What’s even more empowering though is being part of the team behind Earth Guardians, and making that experience a reality for as many people as possible.”

Connecting people to nature, finding biosecurity threats, protecting biodiversity.

Connecting people to nature, finding biosecurity threats, protecting biodiversity.

“This method of fundraising is a nice fit for our technology,” says Robinson, “which is designed to treat individuals as equal partners, with their own opportunity to receive real rewards from their contribution to biodiversity data - as opposed to treating people like mass volunteers or data products for advertisers.”

The company began in 2015 with a crowdfunding campaign of just $3500 for a prototype app. QuestaGame’s player community has since expanded to over 45 countries, generating over 2 million sightings and identifications of plants and animals (and fungi) on land and in the ocean. 

In 2018 the company was awarded the Eureka Prize for Citizen Science Innovation. It’s currently headquartered in Cairns, with an office recently opened in Hyderabad, India. 

Earth Guardians expects to launch the equity crowdfunding on the PledgeMe platform in May 2020. PledgeMe, which set up offices in Australia last year, has already achieved successful raises for a number of Australian startups. 

“What’s most exciting to me is that we’ve only scratched the surface of what’s possible in this space,” says Robinson. “This is a vast and largely untapped market, so quite an expansive growth opportunity ahead.”

The equity crowdfunding campaign launch date will be announced in November.

For more information, see https://questagame.com/equity or contact Andrew Robinson via https://questagame.com/contact-us

Ready for the Largest BioBlitz in Australia's History?

THIRD ANNUAL “GREAT AUSSIE BIOQUEST” OFFERS $10,000 in CASH AND PRIZES

— for immediate release —


Australians are getting ready to participate in the third annual Great Aussie BioQuest, a competition to help map and protect the country’s biodiversity.

The event, which runs during National Science Week (10-18 August) is once again expected to be the largest coordinated “bioblitz” - an intensive, time-bound survey of species - in Australia’s history.

“The recent IPBES report on biodiversity makes it clear that we need to radically transform our approach to biodiversity conservation,” says Dr. Mallika Robinson, Director and Co-Founder of QuestaGame, the citizen science app which developed and has hosted the competition for the last four years.

“Thanks to all the partners involved, the Great Aussie BioQuest will collect and verify more biodiversity data in one month than many citizen science projects can hope to collect in years.”

As part of the Great Aussie BioQuest, scores go both toward individual performance and are grouped according to state or territory, which means participants can see how their state or territory compares against others.

This year $10,000 worth of cash and prizes will be distributed among organisations and players from the Australian state or territory which earns the most points during the competition.

“The great thing is that anyone in Australia, of any skill level, can participate at the same time,” says David Haynes, a co-founder of QuestaGame. “If you don’t know the name of what you find, the app will identify it for you.”

The BioQuest also rewards higher scores for more remarkable sightings, with scores being scaled according to season and location. So for example sightings in Melbourne during winter are likely to earn more points than in Cairns, where it’s warmer and more biodiversity is visible.

That said, last year’s winner was Queensland, followed by Western Australia and the Northern Territory.

”It really comes down to participation and effort,” says Robinson. “The competition is intense, but it’s a lot of fun too. You get to have fun, learn lots of things about what you find, and contribute to scientific research at the same time.”  

The biodiversity data collected during the Great Aussie BioQuest contributes to national and international biodiversity databases for scientific research and conservation. Last year’s BioQuest generated over 20,000 sightings and identifications.

To be part of the BioQuest, participants simply download the free-to-play QuestaGame app, the world’s first outdoor biodiversity gaming app aimed at connecting players to nature and experts. The app is often called the “Pokémon GO of real life” and recently received Australia’s prestigious Eureka Prize.

“At the end of the day, the Great Aussie BioQuest is really about discovering Australia,” says Robinson. “Our players are seeing things few people in Australia ever notice.”

QuestaGame players have found some particularly high-scoring plants and animals, including species listed as endangered, or as invasive threats, as well as numerous undescribed or potentially new species. One player even had a new species of spider named after him.

In addition to empowering tens of thousands of players to discover, learn about and help map biodiversity, QuestaGame engages the expert communities of over 100 conservation groups in species identification. Through the Pays to Know Nature Program, people can raise money for their chosen conservation causes by providing correct identifications of the sightings being submitted by players.

Anyone, anywhere in Australia, can join the Great Aussie BioQuest by playing QuestaGame during National Science Week (10-18 August).

To find out more about QuestaGame, visit www.questagame.com

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For further media information contact info@questagame.com

Sri Lankan Team Sweeps to Victory in the 2019 University BioQuest

“Biodiversity is the Real Winner”

A team of university students in Sri Lanka has virtually swept the third annual University BioQuest competition - a global competition in which university staff, students and communities around the world compete to map biodiversity through a mobile gaming app.

What started with just two universities in 2017 - Sydney in Australia and Santa Barbara in the US - has grown to 50 universities from 14 countries this year.

What started with just two universities in 2017 - Sydney in Australia and Santa Barbara in the US - has grown to 50 universities from 14 countries this year.

This year’s competition involved 50 teams in 14 different countries, from Australia to India to the USA, and generated over 94000 sightings and identifications. Most the resulting species data is shared with national and global biodiversity databases for scientific research and conservation. 

“Some of the discoveries where simply incredible,” says Mallika Robinson, director and co-founder of QuestaGame, the gaming app which the players use during the competition. “The Peradeniya team was finding new genera and species not  recorded previously in the wild. But it wasn’t just Sri Lankan players finding cool life forms. Players from Laos, India, Malaysia, Australia made some interesting discoveries as well. One student found an earless dragon near Adelaide - a species that’s hard to spot.”

There was no doubt the University of Peradeniya in Sri Lanka, first timers in the competition, stood out among the field. They not only took the champion spotters team trophy, but racked up the top score for identifications as well. 

“The game has changed our lifestyles,” says Anushka Tennakoon, captain of the Peradeniya team. “We’ve learned to enjoy the environment around us.  It’s opened our eyes.”

A Peradeniya player named Thiranya concurred and credited the leadership of Tennakoon.

A rarely seen stick insect (Trachythorax sparaxes) from bogzzi of the University of Peradeniya in Sri Lanka.

A rarely seen stick insect (Trachythorax sparaxes) from bogzzi of the University of Peradeniya in Sri Lanka.

“He gave us a lot of guidance,” says Thiranya. “The game totally changed our way of thinking about biodiversity. Now we feel an even greater need to protect it.”

The top individual awards, meanwhile, also went to a Peradeniya player named “Dodo,” who won both the champion spotter and champion identifier awards. Even the highest scoring find, a stick insect named Trachythorax sparaxes, went to a player named “bogzzi,” also from the University of Peradeniya.

“The stick insect was identified by Dr. Paul Brock,” explains Robinson. “The very researcher who has recently re-verified the taxonomy of the species. It was the first record of the insect on the Global Biodiversity Information Facility, which is the global map for species distributions.” 

But Sri Lanka didn’t sweep the competition entirely. The most valuable team award went to a group of tutors from the University of Adelaide, led by a player named “octonaughts”; while Macquarie University, led by Jenny Donald, scored second place in identifications and third place in spotting. 

Melbourne University, led by “QueenoftheBugs” and “Phascolarctos,” took second place in spotting; and several other teams performed at a very high level. 

“The competition seems to get more competitive every year,” says Robinson. “More players, better sightings, higher levels of expertise, higher quality data.”

“The idea behind the competition,” she adds, “is to connect more people to nature, increase environmental literacy, and support biodiversity conservation with real data.  If the University BioQuest is any indication, it seems to be working. Biodiversity is the real winner here.”

The complete results can be viewed at http://questagame.com/unibioquest

Mobile Gamers Test their Skills to Raise Money for BirdLife Australia

Australians will soon have a chance to raise funds for BirdLife Australia by identifying bird photographs submitted through QuestaGame, a popular mobile gaming app.

The event, the “Feathered Frenzy BioQuest,” runs from 19 February to 3 March. Participants submit and help identify photos of birds through the QuestaGame mobile app, with higher scores awarded for more remarkable finds of different bird species. 

Thanks to a pledge from The Garry White Foundation, BirdLife Australia will receive $1 for every correct bird identification submitted through QuestaGame’s app during the BioQuest period (with a current maximum limit of $6000). The money will go toward BirdLife’s program to help protect beach-nesting birds. 

“It’s a very innovative model,” says Philippa Hodson, Executive Director of The Garry White Foundation. “It not only funds BirdLife's fantastic program of protecting beach-nesting birds, but it allows us, in a fun way, to engage the public in learning more about Australia’s birds and encouraging citizen scientists to help map biodiversity.”

Dr. Mallika Robinson, co-founder and Director of QuestaGame, says the program fits neatly with QuestaGame’s existing BioQuest program, in which individuals and teams compete against each other to help map species around the world.

“We’re running more and more BioQuests every month," says Dr. Robinson. “It occurred to us, rather than simply award points or prizes, why not create a program that channels funds directly to conservation organisations, and gets people learning about wildlife while helping map biodiversity for research and conservation?”

QuestaGame’s most recent BioQuest, the “Butterfly and Moth Mania BioQuest,” generated reports of over 1000 unique species in just 12 days, including a rare hawk moth, Eupanacra splendens, from a player named Kyrsten, and a yet to be described species of day-flying Lithosiini moth discovered by a QuestaGame player named Penelope.

“Helping people learn about birds is a fundamental part of BirdLife’s effort to protect Australia’s precious bird species,” says Ralf Stenard of BirdLife Australia. “Education and conservation go hand in hand, by both educating the public and providing resource for our conservation programs.”

The QuestaGame app allows members of the community to report any plant or animal they see and receive identifications from experts. BioQuest competitions offer a more targeted survey method in conjunction with land managers and conservation groups. Linking these events with a new fundraising opportunity rewards the expertise and interests of members of the community, while increasing understanding of local biodiversity.

“There’s definitely an economic gain to involving the public in biodiversity research and conservation,” says Dr. Robinson, citing a 2015 paper in the journal Biodiversity Conservation which estimates roughly $1000 of economic value per year for each citizen scientist engaged in biodiversity projects. 

“So for donors, not only does your money go to the conservation project, but you’re adding value through increased public participation, awareness, education, and citizen science.”

Meanwhile, when the Feathered Frenzy BioQuest begins on February 19, participants of all ages, all across Australia, can not only have fun getting outdoors and photographing birds, but their identification skills will raise money to help protect the very creatures they adore.
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For more information, see:

Or contact:

  • John Martin - Media spokesperson (QuestaGame), phone: (04)47.487.094

  • Philippa Hodson - Executive Director, Garry White Foundation, info@gwf.org.au

  • Birdlife - info@birdlife.org.au