Artículo de revista
A Vision for Global Biodiversity Monitoring With Citizen Science
Fecha
2018Registro en:
Advances in Ecological Research, Volumen 59, 2018.
00652504
10.1016/bs.aecr.2018.06.003
Autor
Pocock, Michael
Chandler, Mark
Bonney, Rick
Thornhill, Ian
Albin, Anna
August, Tom
Bachman, Steven
Brown, Peter
Fernandes Cunha, Davi
Grez Villarroel, Audrey
Jackson, Colin
Peters, Monica
Romer Rabarijaon, Narindra
Roy, Helen
Zaviezo, Tania
Danielsen, Finn
Institución
Resumen
Global biodiversity monitoring is urgently needed across the world to assess the impacts of environmental change on biodiversity. One way to increase monitoring is through citizen science. ‘Citizen science’ is a term that we use in this chapter to describe the diverse approaches that involve people in monitoring in a voluntary capacity, thus including participatory monitoring in which people work collaboratively with scientists in developing monitoring. There is great unrealised potential for citizen science, especially in Asia and Africa. However, to fulfil this potential citizen science will need to meet local needs (for participants, communities and decision makers, including people's own use of the data and their motivations to participate) and support global needs for biodiversity monitoring (including the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals and the Aichi Biodiversity Targets). Activities should be feasible (for participants to provide scientifically rigorous data) and useful (for data users, from local to global scales). We use examples from across the world to demonstrate how monitoring can engage different types of participants, through different technologies, to record different variables according to different sampling approaches. Overall, these examples show how citizen science has the potential to provide a step change in our ability to monitor biodiversity—and hence respond to threats at all scales from local to global.