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研究社交媒体和公民科学数据追踪物种分布变化的潜力。

Investigating the potential of social media and citizen science data to track changes in species' distributions.

作者信息

O'Neill Daisy, Häkkinen Henry, Neumann Jessica, Shaffrey Len, Cheffings Chris, Norris Ken, Pettorelli Nathalie

机构信息

Institute of Zoology Zoological Society of London London UK.

Department of Geography and Environmental Science University of Reading Reading UK.

出版信息

Ecol Evol. 2023 May 8;13(5):e10063. doi: 10.1002/ece3.10063. eCollection 2023 May.

Abstract

How to best track species as they rapidly alter their distributions in response to climate change has become a key scientific priority. Information on species distributions is derived from biological records, which tend to be primarily sourced from traditional recording schemes, but increasingly also by citizen science initiatives and social media platforms, with biological recording having become more accessible to the general public. To date, however, our understanding of the respective potential of social media and citizen science to complement the information gathered by traditional recording schemes remains limited, particularly when it comes to tracking species on the move with climate change. To address this gap, we investigated how species occurrence observations vary between different sources and to what extent traditional, citizen science, and social media records are complementary, using the Banded Demoiselle () in Britain as a case study. Banded Demoiselle occurrences were extracted from citizen science initiatives (iRecord and iNaturalist) and social media platforms (Facebook, Flickr, and Twitter), and compared with traditional records primarily sourced from the British Dragonfly Society. Our results showed that species presence maps differ between record types, with 61% of the citizen science, 58% of the traditional, and 49% of the social media observations being unique to that data type. Banded Demoiselle habitat suitability maps differed most according to traditional and social media projections, with traditional and citizen science being the most consistent. We conclude that (i) social media records provide insights into the Banded Demoiselle distribution and habitat preference that are different from, and complementary to, the insights gathered from traditional recording schemes and citizen science initiatives; (ii) predicted habitat suitability maps that ignore information from social media records can substantially underestimate (by over 3500 km in the case of the Banded Demoiselle) potential suitable habitat availability.

摘要

随着物种因气候变化而迅速改变其分布范围,如何最好地追踪它们已成为一项关键的科学重点。物种分布信息来自生物记录,这些记录主要源于传统记录计划,但越来越多地也来自公民科学倡议和社交媒体平台,生物记录已变得更易于公众获取。然而,迄今为止,我们对社交媒体和公民科学在补充传统记录计划所收集信息方面各自潜力的理解仍然有限,尤其是在追踪随气候变化而迁移的物种时。为了填补这一空白,我们以英国的带纹豆娘( )为例,研究了不同来源的物种出现观测数据如何变化,以及传统记录、公民科学记录和社交媒体记录在多大程度上具有互补性。从公民科学倡议(iRecord和iNaturalist)和社交媒体平台(Facebook、Flickr和Twitter)中提取带纹豆娘的出现记录,并与主要来自英国蜻蜓协会的传统记录进行比较。我们的结果表明,不同记录类型的物种存在地图存在差异,公民科学记录中有61%、传统记录中有58%、社交媒体观测中有49%是该数据类型所独有的。根据传统记录和社交媒体预测,带纹豆娘的栖息地适宜性地图差异最大,传统记录和公民科学记录最为一致。我们得出以下结论:(i)社交媒体记录提供了关于带纹豆娘分布和栖息地偏好的见解,这些见解与从传统记录计划和公民科学倡议中收集的见解不同且具有互补性;(ii)忽略社交媒体记录信息的预测栖息地适宜性地图可能会大幅低估(以带纹豆娘为例,低估超过3500平方公里)潜在适宜栖息地的可用性。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/0b09/10166650/da506cb539d2/ECE3-13-e10063-g004.jpg

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