Kelling Steve, Johnston Alison, Bonn Aletta, Fink Daniel, Ruiz-Gutierrez Viviana, Bonney Rick, Fernandez Miguel, Hochachka Wesley M, Julliard Romain, Kraemer Roland, Guralnick Robert
Cornell Lab of Ornithology, at Cornell University, in Ithaca New York.
Cornell Lab of Ornithology and with the Department of Zoology at the University of Cambridge, in Cambridge, England.
Bioscience. 2019 Mar 1;69(3):170-179. doi: 10.1093/biosci/biz010. Epub 2019 Mar 18.
Biodiversity is being lost at an unprecedented rate, and monitoring is crucial for understanding the causal drivers and assessing solutions. Most biodiversity monitoring data are collected by volunteers through citizen science projects, and often crucial information is lacking to account for the inevitable biases that observers introduce during data collection. We contend that citizen science projects intended to support biodiversity monitoring must gather information about the observation process as well as species occurrence. We illustrate this using eBird, a global citizen science project that collects information on bird occurrences as well as vital contextual information on the observation process while maintaining broad participation. Our fundamental argument is that regardless of what species are being monitored, when citizen science projects collect a small set of basic information about how participants make their observations, the scientific value of the data collected will be dramatically improved.
生物多样性正以前所未有的速度丧失,而监测对于理解其成因驱动因素和评估应对方案至关重要。大多数生物多样性监测数据是由志愿者通过公民科学项目收集的,而且往往缺乏关键信息来解释观察者在数据收集过程中不可避免地引入的偏差。我们认为,旨在支持生物多样性监测的公民科学项目必须收集有关观察过程以及物种出现情况的信息。我们以eBird为例进行说明,这是一个全球公民科学项目,它在保持广泛参与的同时,收集有关鸟类出现情况的信息以及关于观察过程的重要背景信息。我们的基本观点是,无论监测的是哪些物种,当公民科学项目收集一小部分关于参与者如何进行观察的基本信息时,所收集数据的科学价值将得到显著提升。