Everyone can see the coordinates unless the taxon is threatened.
Obscured
Public coordinates shown as a random point within 10KM of the true coordinates. True coordinates are only visible to you and the curators of projects to which you add the observation.
private
Coordinates completely hidden from public maps, true coordinates only visible to you and the curators of projects to which you add the observation. Observations with private coordinates will still be used to verify place check lists.
Thanks, @dannym! This is actually from about a year ago, but I saw a similar mushroom posted recently, so I decided I could go ahead and put it into iNat.... I will be pleased to get, perhaps, a better sense of the ID. And then there is the slug and there is the moss! :-)
Stunning! This looks like a mushroom on the cover of my reference book, Mushrooms of Ontario and Eastern Canada (George Barron, 1999). Inside it's titled, Mushrooms of Northeast North America. That mushroom is Chanterelle Waxcap (Hygrocybe cantharellus). Of course, there are many look alikes, but it reminded me of the cover. Nice find! I'd like to encounter one of those.
Thanks, Shirley! When I looked at the photo again last night, it did catch my eye. I'd forgotten that it was pretty good. I'm glad you mentioned that particular waxcap species -- it matches the one I had in mind, so I'm going to go ahead and make that ID and tag an expert. Cheers! :-) Charlotte
The data quality assessment is a summary of an observation's accuracy. All
observations start as "casual" grade, and become
"needs ID" when
the observation has a date
the observation is georeferenced (i.e. has lat/lon coordinates)
the observation has photos or sounds
the observation isn't of a human
Observations become "research grade" when
the iNat community agrees on species-level ID or lower, i.e.
when more than 2/3 of identifiers agree on a taxon
Observations will revert to "casual" if the above conditions aren't met or the community agrees
the location doesn't look
accurate (e.g. monkeys in the middle of the ocean,
hippos in office buildings, etc.)
the organism isn't wild/naturalized (e.g. captive or cultivated by humans
or intelligent space aliens)
the observation doesn't present evidence of an
organism, e.g. images of landscapes, water features,
rocks, etc.
the observation doesn't present recent (~100 years) evidence of
the organism (e.g. fossils, but tracks, scat, and dead leaves
are ok)
the observation no longer needs an ID and the community ID is above family
the observer has opted out of the community ID and the community
ID taxon is not an ancestor or descendant of the taxon associated
with the observer's ID
And if that wasn't complicated enough, there are also situations where the system gets a vote:
The system will vote that the observation is not wild/naturalized
if there are at least 10 other observations of a genus or lower in
the smallest county-, state-, or country-equivalent place that
contains this observation and 80% or more of those observations
have been marked as not wild/naturalized.
Comments & Identifications
Incredible! @tiwane
Thanks, @dannym! This is actually from about a year ago, but I saw a similar mushroom posted recently, so I decided I could go ahead and put it into iNat.... I will be pleased to get, perhaps, a better sense of the ID. And then there is the slug and there is the moss! :-)
Stunning! This looks like a mushroom on the cover of my reference book, Mushrooms of Ontario and Eastern Canada (George Barron, 1999). Inside it's titled, Mushrooms of Northeast North America. That mushroom is Chanterelle Waxcap (Hygrocybe cantharellus). Of course, there are many look alikes, but it reminded me of the cover. Nice find! I'd like to encounter one of those.
Thanks, Shirley! When I looked at the photo again last night, it did catch my eye. I'd forgotten that it was pretty good. I'm glad you mentioned that particular waxcap species -- it matches the one I had in mind, so I'm going to go ahead and make that ID and tag an expert. Cheers! :-) Charlotte
Thanks for the heads-up, @dannym; @cgbb2004, this is iNaturalist's Observation of the Day!
We've posted it to our Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram accounts.
Thank you @dannym and @tiwane!
Cheers!
Beautiful capture!
I had thought I had added the species Hygrocybe cantharellus but see I missed that step....
Hi @johnplischke -- can you help with this ID?
Many thanks in advance!
Its a Hygrocybe but I can not see enough features to tell which one.
Thank you.
Add a comment
Add an identification