The Caddisfly Collective: Methods of assessing Trichoptera diversity on a continental scale with community scientists

Kelly M. Murray-Stoker, Shannon J. McCauley
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Amidst a global biodiversity crisis, collecting data at large spatial scales can illuminate patterns. Community science can be an avenue to reduce costs, broaden the scope of sampling, and, most importantly, connect with members of the public who are interested in and impacted by long-term ecological change. In 2021, we formulated a community science project – The Caddisfly Collective. Our goal was to study the regional influences on the responses of stream caddisfly (Trichoptera) communities to urbanization in the United States and Canada. Community scientists helped us achieve this goal by collecting caddisflies across a wider geographic scale than we could have reached on our own. To build The Caddisfly Collective, we recruited participants through social media and other online forums. We mailed collecting kits with a USB-powered ultraviolet LED light, a collecting container, bottles of preservative, data sheets, and collection labels to each participant; participants mailed back specimens and completed data sheets. There was a 79.7% rate of follow-through from sign-up to collection. During the project, 63 participants set up light-traps near urban and non-urban streams in seven different North American geographic regions, collecting adult caddisflies at 141 sites across the United States and Canada. Most sites were in the Midwest region, while the fewest sites were in the Far North region. Urban areas, classified by land cover data, comprised ~29% of total sites. We hope the details of our project can help other interested scientists implement similar projects in the future, especially focused on ecologically important caddisfly communities.
The Caddisfly Collective:与社区科学家在大陆尺度上评估毛翅目多样性的方法
在全球生物多样性危机中,在大空间尺度上收集数据可以阐明模式。社区科学可以降低成本,扩大采样范围,最重要的是,可以与对长期生态变化感兴趣并受其影响的公众建立联系。2021年,我们制定了一个社区科学项目——The Caddisfly Collective。本研究的目的是研究美国和加拿大河蝇(Trichoptera)群落对城市化反应的区域影响。社区科学家帮助我们实现了这一目标,他们在比我们自己所能达到的更广泛的地理范围内收集了死蝇。为了建立Caddisfly Collective,我们通过社交媒体和其他在线论坛招募参与者。我们给每个参与者邮寄了收集包,包括usb供电的紫外线LED灯,收集容器,防腐剂瓶,数据表和收集标签;参与者邮寄标本并填写数据表。从注册到回收的跟进率为79.7%。在该项目中,63名参与者在北美7个不同地理区域的城市和非城市溪流附近设置了灯光陷阱,在美国和加拿大的141个地点收集成年地虱。大多数地点在中西部地区,而最少的地点在远北地区。按土地覆盖数据分类,城市地区约占总站点的29%。我们希望我们项目的细节可以帮助其他感兴趣的科学家在未来实施类似的项目,特别是关注生态上重要的热蝇群落。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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