We all know bees like flowers, but did you know that Australia's micro flower farms can be literal hives of biodiversity? Both native and introduced species of invertebrates (both the good and the bad), birds, reptiles, amphibians, mammals, native plants and weeds, fungi, and slime molds all abound on micro flower farms.
Have you seen something you'd like identified like a crop weed ...more ↓
We all know bees like flowers, but did you know that Australia's micro flower farms can be literal hives of biodiversity? Both native and introduced species of invertebrates (both the good and the bad), birds, reptiles, amphibians, mammals, native plants and weeds, fungi, and slime molds all abound on micro flower farms.
Have you seen something you'd like identified like a crop weed or bug? Are you just keen to learn more about the biodiversity on your farm? Whether you farm on a couple of acres or a couple of square metres, your farm biodiversity observations are very welcome in this project!
All you need to start adding to the project is to join iNaturalist, take a photo or sound recording (helpful for frogs, birds, and some invertebrates!), join 'Australia's Biodiverse Micro Flower Farms' and submit your observations. Past photographs and soundclips are very welcome to be uploaded.
You can set your location details to private/obscure if you would like your location to remain hidden.
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