Dennis Emily B, Morgan Byron J T, Brereton Tom M, Roy David B, Fox Richard
School of Mathematics, Statistics and Actuarial Science, University of Kent, Canterbury, CT2 7FS, U.K.
Butterfly Conservation, Manor Yard, East Lulworth, Wareham, BH20 5QP, U.K.
Conserv Biol. 2017 Dec;31(6):1350-1361. doi: 10.1111/cobi.12956. Epub 2017 Aug 10.
Citizen scientists are increasingly engaged in gathering biodiversity information, but trade-offs are often required between public engagement goals and reliable data collection. We compared population estimates for 18 widespread butterfly species derived from the first 4 years (2011-2014) of a short-duration citizen science project (Big Butterfly Count [BBC]) with those from long-running, standardized monitoring data collected by experienced observers (U.K. Butterfly Monitoring Scheme [UKBMS]). BBC data are gathered during an annual 3-week period, whereas UKBMS sampling takes place over 6 months each year. An initial comparison with UKBMS data restricted to the 3-week BBC period revealed that species population changes were significantly correlated between the 2 sources. The short-duration sampling season rendered BBC counts susceptible to bias caused by interannual phenological variation in the timing of species' flight periods. The BBC counts were positively related to butterfly phenology and sampling effort. Annual estimates of species abundance and population trends predicted from models including BBC data and weather covariates as a proxy for phenology correlated significantly with those derived from UKBMS data. Overall, citizen science data obtained using a simple sampling protocol produced comparable estimates of butterfly species abundance to data collected through standardized monitoring methods. Although caution is urged in extrapolating from this U.K. study of a small number of common, conspicuous insects, we found that mass-participation citizen science can simultaneously contribute to public engagement and biodiversity monitoring. Mass-participation citizen science is not an adequate replacement for standardized biodiversity monitoring but may extend and complement it (e.g., through sampling different land-use types), as well as serving to reconnect an increasingly urban human population with nature.
公民科学家越来越多地参与到生物多样性信息的收集工作中,但在公众参与目标和可靠数据收集之间往往需要进行权衡。我们比较了一个短期公民科学项目(大蝴蝶计数[BBC])头4年(2011 - 2014年)得出的18种常见蝴蝶物种的种群估计数,以及由经验丰富的观察者收集的长期标准化监测数据(英国蝴蝶监测计划[UKBMS])。BBC数据是在每年为期3周的时间段内收集的,而UKBMS的采样则每年持续6个月。最初将BBC数据与仅在BBC的3周时间段内的UKBMS数据进行比较,结果显示这两种来源的物种种群变化显著相关。较短的采样季节使BBC的计数容易受到物种飞行期时间年际物候变化所导致的偏差影响。BBC的计数与蝴蝶物候和采样努力呈正相关。从包含BBC数据和天气协变量作为物候替代指标的模型预测的物种丰度和种群趋势的年度估计值,与从UKBMS数据得出的估计值显著相关。总体而言,使用简单采样方案获得的公民科学数据得出的蝴蝶物种丰度估计值,与通过标准化监测方法收集的数据相当。尽管在从这项针对少数常见、显眼昆虫的英国研究进行外推时需谨慎,但我们发现大规模参与的公民科学能够同时促进公众参与和生物多样性监测。大规模参与的公民科学并非标准化生物多样性监测的充分替代品,但可能会扩展并补充它(例如,通过对不同土地利用类型进行采样),同时还能让日益城市化的人类重新与自然建立联系。