Just as every human has a unique set of fingerprints, each zebra has a subtly different pattern of stripes–and that trait is proving valuable in a new conservation effort. A nonprofit conservation project called Wildbook utilizes crowdsourced photos to identify and track individual animals that belong to threatened species. But it doesn’t just identify zebras. The effort extends to whale sharks, manta rays, giraffes and more. This new technology provides a non-invasive way to study the species over time. We’re fans of the project, especially since it helps friends like our Grévy"s zebra, which is endangered.
Combating extinction with citizen science
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
And to think that I saw it in Cappadocia
-
Three cheers for polar bears!
-
Coming home to roost
-
World Dolphin Day
-
Finnish Independence Day
-
Evidence of human habitation
-
Ruins of Inca temples and terraces on Huayna Picchu, Peru
-
Gespensterwald, Nienhagen, Germany
-
Gamboa Crater, Mars
-
Happy Mothers Day!
-
Heavens Gate Cave, Tianmen Mountain National Park, China
-
World-class art comes to Arkansas
-
Infant Sumatran orangutan, Indonesia
-
Who doesn’t love a ‘Puppy’?
-
Till the cows come home
-
Salmon migration in full swing
-
Stop and see the flowers
-
A reflection of Europe s past
-
On a Healing Field for Veterans Day
-
The Cathedral of Florence, Italy
-
Striated heron on a Victoria water lily, Pantanal, Brazil
-
White dunes, blue lagoons
-
In the path of the pronghorn
-
Eurasian lynx
-
Celebrating World Water Day
-
The scene of a literary crime
-
Castle Stalker, Argyll, Scotland
-
A universe underground
-
Last day of National Park Week
-
Cordouan Lighthouse, France
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

