It's great to see iNaturalist featured here. We're all addicted.
To interpret your question about reporting, we report on all our birds on a very regular basis through program reports. All our data also gets contributed to “The State of Canada's Birds”, a report that comes out every few years. It's sort of the health card of our bird populations. I highly recommend reading a copy of that report, because it is a real wake-up call as to how in trouble Canada's birds are.
We also do a lot of reporting through published academic papers. Just to give you an example, from 2021-22 Birds Canada's data information has been used for 533 peer-reviewed publications. The bulk of that is citizen science data that's being used. As well, 121 were particularly pertinent to understanding climate change impacts on biodiversity.
So we do report regularly. It's very important for getting awareness out on the issues, but it also underpins one of our core values, and that is open data. We help collect and we help create programs where volunteers can collect rigorous data. Then we do our best to make sure that data is out there and open and accessible so that everyone can use it to make conservation decisions, whether you're publishing a paper or making a change in policy.