University of Essex, School of Biological Sciences, Colchester, United Kingdom.
Instituto Español de Oceanografía (IEO), Centre Oceanogràfic de les Balears, Ecosystem Oceanography Group (GRECO), Moll de Ponent sn, Palma, Spain.
PLoS One. 2019 Jan 9;14(1):e0210007. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0210007. eCollection 2019.
Coral reefs are threatened by numerous global and local stressors. In the face of predicted large-scale coral degradation over the coming decades, the importance of long-term monitoring of stress-induced ecosystem changes has been widely recognised. In areas where sustained funding is unavailable, citizen science monitoring has the potential to be a powerful alternative to conventional monitoring programmes. In this study we used data collected by volunteers in Southeast Sulawesi (Indonesia), to demonstrate the potential of marine citizen science programmes to provide scientifically sound information necessary for detecting ecosystem changes in areas where no alternative data are available. Data were collected annually between 2002 and 2012 and consisted of percent benthic biotic and abiotic cover and fish counts. Analyses revealed long-term coral reef ecosystem change. We observed a continuous decline of hard coral, which in turn had a significant effect on the associated fishes, at community, family and species levels. We provide evidence of the importance of marine citizen science programmes in detecting long-term ecosystem change as an effective way of delivering conservation data to local government and national agencies. This is particularly true for areas where funding for monitoring is unavailable, resulting in an absence of ecological data. For citizen science data to contribute to ecological monitoring and local decision-making, the data collection protocols need to adhere to sound scientific standards, and protocols for data evaluation need to be available to local stakeholders. Here, we describe the monitoring design, data treatment and statistical analyses to be used as potential guidelines in future marine citizen science projects.
珊瑚礁受到众多全球和局部压力因素的威胁。在未来几十年预计大规模珊瑚退化的情况下,长期监测由压力引起的生态系统变化的重要性已得到广泛认可。在无法持续获得资金的地区,公民科学监测有可能成为传统监测计划的有力替代方案。在这项研究中,我们使用在东南苏拉威西(印度尼西亚)由志愿者收集的数据,展示了海洋公民科学计划的潜力,以提供在没有其他数据可用的情况下检测生态系统变化所需的科学依据。数据是在 2002 年至 2012 年之间每年收集的,包括底栖生物和非生物覆盖率和鱼类计数的百分比。分析显示出长期珊瑚礁生态系统的变化。我们观察到硬珊瑚的持续减少,这反过来又对社区、家庭和物种水平的相关鱼类产生了重大影响。我们提供了海洋公民科学计划在检测长期生态系统变化方面的重要性的证据,这是向地方政府和国家机构提供保护数据的有效途径。对于那些缺乏监测资金导致缺乏生态数据的地区来说,这一点尤其正确。为了使公民科学数据能够为生态监测和地方决策提供支持,数据收集协议需要遵守健全的科学标准,并且需要为当地利益相关者提供数据评估协议。在这里,我们描述了监测设计、数据处理和统计分析,可作为未来海洋公民科学项目的潜在指南。