Who is watching our water?: Waterwatch Australia.
Lubczenko, V., & Gowland, K. (2000, January). Who is watching our water?: Waterwatch Australia. In 10th World Water Congress: Water, the Worlds Most Important Resource (pp. 676-683). Melbourne, Vic.: International Water Resources Association.
Next steps for citizen science.
Can citizen science enhance public understanding of science?.
Citizen science in environmental and ecological sciences.
The eBird enterprise: An integrated approach to development and application of citizen science.
Sullivan, B. L., Aycrigg, J. L., Barry, J. H., Bonney, R. E., Bruns, N., Cooper, C. B., … & Kelling, S. (2014). The eBird enterprise: An integrated approach to development and application of citizen science. Biological conservation, 169, 31-40.https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2013.11.003Oxford English Dictionary (2014). Oxford University Press.
Citizen science terminology matters: Exploring key terms.
Eitzel, M. V., Cappadonna, J. L., Santos-Lang, C., Duerr, R. E., Virapongse, A., West, S. E., … & Jiang, Q. (2017). Citizen science terminology matters: Exploring key terms. Citizen science: Theory and practice, 2(1).
Faune France: Amateur Naturalists’ Attachment and Indebtedness in a Citizen Science Biodiversity Database.
Online data sharing with virtual social interactions favor scientific and educational successes in a biodiversity citizen science project.
Torres, A. C., Bedessem, B., Deguines, N., & Fontaine, C. (2022). Online data sharing with virtual social interactions favor scientific and educational successes in a biodiversity citizen science project. Journal of Responsible Innovation, 1-19.
Citizen Science and Public Health-Can eBird data inform relationships between public health and access to biodiversity?.
Maximizing citizen scientists’ contribution to automated species recognition.
Koch, W., Hogeweg, L., Nilsen, E. B., & Finstad, A. G. (2022). Maximizing citizen scientists’ contribution to automated species recognition. bioRxiv.