MyNature Animal Tracks is now available for the iPhone and iPod touch. We are pleased to offer the first comprehensible field guide to animal track identification available with smart-phone technology. You’ll be able to identify from the smallest Weasel to the largest Grizzly Bear found throughout North America at the touch of a button.
Features
- A searchable database on track size and shape featuring 7 search categories. For example 4 toes round in shape the Felid family, 4 toes oval to square in shape the Canid family, hooved tracks, tracks with 5 toes, tracks that are birdlike and much more.
- Clearly illustrated track drawings showing both fore and hind prints with track measurements along with a description of the animal’s habitat and life cycle.
- Illustrated images of each animal’s common gait as well as other gait patterns they may use.
- Digital images of an actual track of each animal in the wild.
- Range maps to reference an animal’s presence in your location.
- Sound wavs of each animal’s vocalizations.
- A full color digital image of what the animal looks like in it’s natural environment.
- A handy ruler to measure and aid in track identification.
- MyNature journal, where you can personally record the tracks you’ve found along with the location, weather conditions or just your own personal thoughts about your day field.
- Tips on finding tracks, plaster casting and much more.













Hi,
Saw a comment on the tree guide app page regarding the devolopment and release of apps to the Android market and that the use of this app appeared to be low in that market. I can’t comment on that directly but I can tell you that I live in the uk and am an Andriod user and would love an app like this for the uk, and the trees one, and a butterflies one, and one on moths and flowers etc etc. The sooner I can get my hands on apps like these and do away with the bag of field guides I end up carrying around with me the better. I appreciate that one user doesn’t make a ‘market’ but I can’t believe there are not more like me in the uk.
Keep up the good work,
Justin
Justin if more people thought like you it would be a no brainer to develop more Android apps.