Smith Walter H, Hamed Michael Kevin
Department of Natural Sciences The University of Virginia's College at Wise Wise Virginia USA.
Department of Fish and Wildlife Conservation College of Natural Resources and the Environment Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Blacksburg Virginia USA.
Ecol Evol. 2020 Aug 15;10(22):12465-12471. doi: 10.1002/ece3.6654. eCollection 2020 Nov.
Citizen science approaches provide adaptable methodologies for enhancing the natural history knowledge of understudied taxa and engaging underserved populations with biodiversity. However, transitions to remote, virtual training, and participant recruitment in response to public health crises like the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic have the potential to disrupt citizen science projects. We present a comparison of outputs from a citizen science initiative built around call surveys for the Mountain Chorus Frog (), an understudied anuran, in Appalachian Virginia, USA, prior to and during the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic. A transition to virtual training in this initiative did not lead to a decrease in scientific output and led to unexpected natural history insight about our focal taxon; however, a reliance on virtual instruction did decrease overall participation by local residents, particularly for rural K-12 students. We discuss the trade-offs exhibited by the adaptation of our initiative to a virtual format and provide recommendations for other citizen science initiatives facing similar restrictions in the face of current and future public health crises.
公民科学方法提供了适应性强的方法,可增强对研究不足的分类群的自然历史知识,并让服务不足的人群参与生物多样性研究。然而,为应对像新冠疫情这样的公共卫生危机而转向远程、虚拟培训及参与者招募,有可能扰乱公民科学项目。我们比较了美国弗吉尼亚州阿巴拉契亚地区围绕对山地合唱蛙(一种研究不足的无尾目动物)进行的电话调查开展的一项公民科学倡议在新冠疫情之前和期间的产出。该倡议向虚拟培训的转变并未导致科学产出下降,还带来了关于我们重点分类群的意外自然历史见解;然而,对虚拟教学的依赖确实降低了当地居民的总体参与度,尤其是农村K-12学生的参与度。我们讨论了我们的倡议采用虚拟形式所展现出的权衡,并为当前和未来面临类似限制的其他公民科学倡议提供建议。