ednacommunity.com Open in urlscan Pro
159.89.149.97  Public Scan

URL: https://ednacommunity.com/
Submission: On December 12 via api from US — Scanned from DE

Form analysis 0 forms found in the DOM

Text Content

Skip to content


EDNA FOR
COMMUNITY SCIENCE

Menu

 * Resources
 * Forum
 * Our Research
 * Our Team
 * Contact
 * Explore Map

 * Resources
 * Forum
 * Our Research
 * Our Team
 * Contact
 * Explore Map




ACROSS THE WORLD, COMMUNITY SCIENTISTS ARE USING EDNA TO ANSWER OUR MOST URGENT
ENVIRONMENTAL QUESTIONS.

Here people and projects can connect on a global map, share reflections and
resources in our forum, and design new initiatives.

Explore Map




LEARN MORE

What is environmental DNA (eDNA)?

eDNA monitoring is a powerful tool that uses samples from the environment to
understand local biodiversity.

Learn More

What is community science?

In community science, scientists, non-scientists, and other users unite to
gather knowledge about the world together.

Learn More

Who are we?
We are a team of Stanford students excited to bring more awareness to the
diversity of projects using eDNA as a tool for community science. This website
started as a research project, which you can learn more about here. Visit Our
Team page to meet the folks behind the research and the website.


GET INVOLVED

There are many different ways that community scientists can be engaged with eDNA
projects. Here are some of the ways community members have been involved in
existing projects: 

Analyzing Data

Studying the data produced to better understand what it means

Receiving Data

Looking at all the data produced

Responding to Data

Working to make a change in response to the data

Reflecting on Project

Giving feedback on what worked well and what could have been done differently

Designing the Project

Helping decide the aims and goals of the project

Sampling

Collecting eDNA samples in the field

Laboratory Processing

Doing steps in the laboratory to determine what DNA is present in the samples

Analyzing Data

Studying the data produced to better understand what it means

Receiving Data

Looking at all the data produced

Responding to Data

Working to make a change in response to the data

Reflecting on Project

Giving feedback on what worked well and what could have been done differently

Designing the Project

Helping decide the aims and goals of the project

Sampling

Collecting eDNA samples in the field

Laboratory Processing

Doing steps in the laboratory to determine what DNA is present in the samples

Analyzing Data

Studying the data produced to better understand what it means




Finding our website helpful or want to get in touch? Reach out through
our Contact page!


EDNA FOR
COMMUNITY SCIENCE

Resources
Forum
Our Research
Our Team
Contact
Explore Map
© 2023 eDNA for Community Science. All Rights Reserved.