{"title":"The role of citizen science in ornithology","authors":"A. Lõhmus","doi":"10.3176/ECO.2011.2.01","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"ORNITHOLOGY AND CITIZEN SCIENCE For many reasons, the study of wild birds has played a pioneering role in the development of modern biology. Although birds were included as examples in the major syntheses before the 20th century (including the theory of natural selection), their special position strengthened along with the broad change of biology from describing patterns towards explaining processes. In the first half of the 20th century, it was recognized that the bird is a well-suited subject for studies into the problems of functional morphology, physiology, behaviour, and orientation of animals (Haffer, 2007). Since then, birds have provided some of the most significant model systems for testing general hypotheses regarding speciation and in the diverse fields of ecology, including population and community ecology, evolutionary and behavioural ecology (Gill, 2007). Another distinct feature of ornithology is that, because of the attractiveness of birds, amateurs have always assisted (and outnumbered) professional ornithologists (Greenwood, 2007). In the modern world, such 'citizen science' (the involvement of volunteers in research) provides two great opportunities. First, it enables to widen both the spatial and the temporal scale of field studies beyond the limited reach of individual researchers and short-term project funding. A respectable part of current ornithology--bird surveys involving broad public participation--thus provides pivotal data for developing conservation science and macroecology, and for detecting long-term changes in wild populations, communities, and the wider environment (Greenwood, 2007; Dickinson et al., 2010; Magurran et al., 2010). Secondly, public participation and direct contact with researchers serve as an educational tool for raising awareness about environmental issues and the scientific method (Brossard et al., 2005; Bonney et al., 2009; Devictor et al., 2010). By that, and by increasing public support, the citizen-science part of ornithology is useful for clever applications of ecological knowledge, particularly in conflict situations of biodiversity conservation. THE ROLE OF PROFESSIONAL SOCIETIES Together with its opportunities, a reliable and self-sustaining citizen-science system presents special challenges. One is that managing the contact with the public requires administering capacity and special skills, such as extensive communication and the development of online data storage systems (Bell et al., 2008). Other challenges are methodological: a prerequisite for the inclusion of a large number of volunteers is a clear and simple protocol of data recording, while the data collected will nevertheless be heterogeneous and probably biased for several reasons. Therefore, proper management and analysis of volunteer-collected data typically require professional statisticians to handle the complex sampling designs, error sources, and data structure (Dickinson et al., 2010). These challenges are best addressed by large non-governmental organizations governed by their (amateur) members but employing professional staff to organize the work; and there are many advantages to having a single national organization at least in the case of ornithology (Greenwood, 2007). As exemplified by the European experience, organized citizen-science approaches can greatly increase study effort and reduce the costs of biodiversity monitoring projects (Schmeller et al., 2009). In Estonia, citizen ornithology started to organize on 1 May 1921, when 15 persons, led by Professors Johannes Piiper and Henrik Koppel (Rector of the University of Tartu), formed the Estonian Ornithological Society (EOS). Despite being re-organized several times, the society soon became the centre of volunteer-assisted ornithological projects in Estonia with distinct peaks of its activity in the 1930s, 1950s, and 1970s (Kumari, 1976; Mand, 1992; Leibak et al., 1994). The two last peaks are largely related to the activity of Professor Eerik Kumari, who organized professional teams, published the first field identification guides in Estonian and, in particular, prepared a so far unsurpassed textbook for amateur researchers (Kumari, 1963). …","PeriodicalId":262667,"journal":{"name":"Estonian Journal of Ecology","volume":"339 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2011-06-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"3","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Estonian Journal of Ecology","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3176/ECO.2011.2.01","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 3
Abstract
ORNITHOLOGY AND CITIZEN SCIENCE For many reasons, the study of wild birds has played a pioneering role in the development of modern biology. Although birds were included as examples in the major syntheses before the 20th century (including the theory of natural selection), their special position strengthened along with the broad change of biology from describing patterns towards explaining processes. In the first half of the 20th century, it was recognized that the bird is a well-suited subject for studies into the problems of functional morphology, physiology, behaviour, and orientation of animals (Haffer, 2007). Since then, birds have provided some of the most significant model systems for testing general hypotheses regarding speciation and in the diverse fields of ecology, including population and community ecology, evolutionary and behavioural ecology (Gill, 2007). Another distinct feature of ornithology is that, because of the attractiveness of birds, amateurs have always assisted (and outnumbered) professional ornithologists (Greenwood, 2007). In the modern world, such 'citizen science' (the involvement of volunteers in research) provides two great opportunities. First, it enables to widen both the spatial and the temporal scale of field studies beyond the limited reach of individual researchers and short-term project funding. A respectable part of current ornithology--bird surveys involving broad public participation--thus provides pivotal data for developing conservation science and macroecology, and for detecting long-term changes in wild populations, communities, and the wider environment (Greenwood, 2007; Dickinson et al., 2010; Magurran et al., 2010). Secondly, public participation and direct contact with researchers serve as an educational tool for raising awareness about environmental issues and the scientific method (Brossard et al., 2005; Bonney et al., 2009; Devictor et al., 2010). By that, and by increasing public support, the citizen-science part of ornithology is useful for clever applications of ecological knowledge, particularly in conflict situations of biodiversity conservation. THE ROLE OF PROFESSIONAL SOCIETIES Together with its opportunities, a reliable and self-sustaining citizen-science system presents special challenges. One is that managing the contact with the public requires administering capacity and special skills, such as extensive communication and the development of online data storage systems (Bell et al., 2008). Other challenges are methodological: a prerequisite for the inclusion of a large number of volunteers is a clear and simple protocol of data recording, while the data collected will nevertheless be heterogeneous and probably biased for several reasons. Therefore, proper management and analysis of volunteer-collected data typically require professional statisticians to handle the complex sampling designs, error sources, and data structure (Dickinson et al., 2010). These challenges are best addressed by large non-governmental organizations governed by their (amateur) members but employing professional staff to organize the work; and there are many advantages to having a single national organization at least in the case of ornithology (Greenwood, 2007). As exemplified by the European experience, organized citizen-science approaches can greatly increase study effort and reduce the costs of biodiversity monitoring projects (Schmeller et al., 2009). In Estonia, citizen ornithology started to organize on 1 May 1921, when 15 persons, led by Professors Johannes Piiper and Henrik Koppel (Rector of the University of Tartu), formed the Estonian Ornithological Society (EOS). Despite being re-organized several times, the society soon became the centre of volunteer-assisted ornithological projects in Estonia with distinct peaks of its activity in the 1930s, 1950s, and 1970s (Kumari, 1976; Mand, 1992; Leibak et al., 1994). The two last peaks are largely related to the activity of Professor Eerik Kumari, who organized professional teams, published the first field identification guides in Estonian and, in particular, prepared a so far unsurpassed textbook for amateur researchers (Kumari, 1963). …
鸟类学与公民科学由于许多原因,对野生鸟类的研究在现代生物学的发展中发挥了先锋作用。尽管鸟类在20世纪之前(包括自然选择理论)被作为主要综合理论的例子,但随着生物学从描述模式向解释过程的广泛变化,它们的特殊地位得到了加强。在20世纪上半叶,人们认识到鸟类是一个非常适合研究动物的功能形态学、生理学、行为和定向问题的对象(Haffer, 2007)。从那时起,鸟类提供了一些最重要的模型系统,用于测试关于物种形成的一般假设,以及生态学的不同领域,包括种群和群落生态学,进化和行为生态学(Gill, 2007)。鸟类学的另一个显著特征是,由于鸟类的吸引力,业余爱好者总是协助(并且数量超过)专业鸟类学家(Greenwood, 2007)。在现代世界,这种“公民科学”(志愿者参与研究)提供了两个很好的机会。首先,它能够扩大实地研究的空间和时间尺度,超出个人研究人员和短期项目资助的有限范围。因此,当前鸟类学的一个重要组成部分——涉及广泛公众参与的鸟类调查——为发展保护科学和宏观生态学,以及探测野生种群、群落和更广泛环境的长期变化提供了关键数据(Greenwood, 2007;Dickinson et al., 2010;Magurran et al., 2010)。其次,公众参与和与研究人员的直接接触是提高对环境问题和科学方法认识的教育工具(Brossard et al., 2005;Bonney et al., 2009;Devictor et al., 2010)。因此,通过增加公众的支持,鸟类学的公民科学部分对于生态知识的巧妙应用是有用的,特别是在生物多样性保护的冲突情况下。一个可靠的、自我维持的公民科学体系在带来机遇的同时,也提出了特殊的挑战。一是管理与公众的接触需要管理能力和特殊技能,例如广泛的沟通和在线数据存储系统的开发(Bell et al., 2008)。其他挑战是方法方面的:包括大量志愿人员的先决条件是数据记录的明确和简单的协议,然而所收集的数据将是不同的,并且可能由于若干原因而有偏见。因此,对志愿者收集的数据进行适当的管理和分析通常需要专业的统计学家来处理复杂的抽样设计、误差来源和数据结构(Dickinson et al., 2010)。这些挑战最好由由其(业余)成员管理但雇用专业人员组织工作的大型非政府组织来解决;至少在鸟类学方面,拥有一个单一的国家组织有很多好处(Greenwood, 2007)。正如欧洲的经验所示,有组织的公民科学方法可以大大增加研究工作,降低生物多样性监测项目的成本(Schmeller et al., 2009)。在爱沙尼亚,公民鸟类学于1921年5月1日开始组织起来,当时15人在约翰内斯·派珀教授和亨里克·科佩尔(塔尔图大学校长)的带领下成立了爱沙尼亚鸟类学学会。尽管重组了几次,该协会很快成为爱沙尼亚志愿者协助鸟类学项目的中心,其活动在20世纪30年代、50年代和70年代达到了明显的高峰(Kumari, 1976;曼,1992;Leibak et al., 1994)。最后两个高峰主要与Eerik Kumari教授的活动有关,他组织了专业小组,用爱沙尼亚语出版了第一批实地鉴定指南,特别是为业余研究人员编写了迄今为止无与伦比的教科书(Kumari, 1963年)。…