Research published today in Methods in Ecology and Evolution shows
that methods to record marine diversity used by amateurs returned
results consistent with techniques favoured by peer-reviewed science.
The findings give weight to the growing phenomenon of citizen
science, which sees data crowd-sourced from an army of avid twitchers,
divers, walkers and other wildlife enthusiasts.
The field study compared methods used by 'citizen' SCUBA divers with
those used by professional scientists, to measure the variety of fish
species in three Caribbean sites close to South Caicos in the Turks and Caicos Islands.
Locations of survey sites used for the comparison |
The divers surveyed the sites using two methods -- the 'belt transect', used in peer reviewed fish diversity studies, and the 'roving diver technique', used by the Reef Environmental Education Foundation
(REEF) volunteer fish survey project.
Two teams of 12 divers made 144 separate underwater surveys across the sites over four weeks. While the traditional scientific survey revealed sightings of 106
different types of fish, the volunteer technique detected greater marine
diversity with a total of 137 in the same waters. The larger number of species detected by the volunteer protocol suggests
this protocol may be advantageous with regards to the completion of
taxonomic lists.
Dr Ben Holt, from the University of East Anglia, led the
research in partnership with the Centre for Marine Resource Studies in the Caribbean and the University of Copenhagen, Denmark. This is what he said in a press release:
The results of this study are important for the future of
citizen science and the use of data collected by these programs.
Allowing volunteers to use flexible and less standardised methods has
important consequences for the long term success of citizen science
programs. Amateur enthusiasts typically do not have the resources or
training to use professional methodology. Our study demonstrates the
quality of data collected using a volunteer method can match, and in
some respects exceed, protocols used by professional scientists. Enlisting the help of a large pool of volunteers helps professional researchers collect valuable data across many ecosystems.
The popularity of SCUBA diving has resulted in monitoring of the
underwater environment on a scale that was previously impossible. For
example, the REEF method has been used by volunteers in more than
160,000 underwater surveys across the world. It would have cost many
millions of pounds for professionals to have undertaken the same work.
For example Lion fish is an invasive species which was not in the
Caribbean until roughly 10 years ago. They have now become a real
problem in many areas and this invasion has been tracked using volunteer
data. Following our study, scientists can have more confidence when
using these data to consider the impact of threats, such as invasive
species, on the wider natural communities.
It is important to note that our study does not consider the
abilities of the individuals performing the surveys and this is also an
important consideration for any large scale biodiversity program. By
addressing these issues we can make important steps towards enabling the
large pool of volunteer enthusiasts to help professional researchers by
collecting valuable data across many ecosystems.
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