Logistical and preference bias in participatory science butterfly data

IF 10 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ECOLOGY
Benjamin R Goldstein, Sara Stoudt, Jayme MM Lewthwaite, Vaughn Shirey, Eros Mendoza, Laura Melissa Guzman
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Abstract

The volume of and interest in unstructured participatory science data has increased dramatically in recent years. However, unstructured participatory science data contain taxonomic biases—encounters with some species are more likely to be reported than encounters with others. Taxonomic biases are driven by human preferences for different species and by logistical factors that make observing certain species challenging. We investigated taxonomic bias in reports of butterflies by characterizing differences between a dedicated participatory semi-structured dataset, eButterfly, and a popular unstructured dataset, iNaturalist, in spatiotemporally explicit models. Across 194 butterfly species, we found that 53 species were overreported and 34 species were underreported in opportunistic data. Ease of identification and feature diversity were significantly associated with overreporting in opportunistic sampling, and strong patterns in overreporting by family were also detected. Quantifying taxonomic biases not only helps us understand how humans engage with nature but also is necessary to generate robust inference from unstructured participatory data.

参与式科学蝴蝶数据中的后勤和偏好偏差
近年来,非结构化参与式科学数据的数量和人们对其的兴趣急剧增加。然而,非结构化参与式科学数据包含分类偏差--报告遇到某些物种的几率要高于遇到其他物种的几率。分类偏差是由人类对不同物种的偏好以及使观察某些物种具有挑战性的后勤因素造成的。我们研究了蝴蝶报告中的分类偏差,通过时空模型分析了专门的参与式半结构化数据集 eButterfly 和流行的非结构化数据集 iNaturalist 之间的差异。在 194 个蝴蝶物种中,我们发现机会主义数据中有 53 个物种被多报,34 个物种被少报。在机会性采样中,识别的难易程度和特征多样性与多报显著相关,同时还发现了按科划分的多报模式。量化分类偏差不仅有助于我们了解人类是如何与自然打交道的,而且对于从非结构化的参与式数据中得出可靠的推论也很有必要。
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来源期刊
Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment
Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 环境科学-环境科学
CiteScore
18.30
自引率
1.00%
发文量
128
审稿时长
9-18 weeks
期刊介绍: Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment is a publication by the Ecological Society of America that focuses on the significance of ecology and environmental science in various aspects of research and problem-solving. The journal covers topics such as biodiversity conservation, ecosystem preservation, natural resource management, public policy, and other related areas. The publication features a range of content, including peer-reviewed articles, editorials, commentaries, letters, and occasional special issues and topical series. It releases ten issues per year, excluding January and July. ESA members receive both print and electronic copies of the journal, while institutional subscriptions are also available. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment is highly regarded in the field, as indicated by its ranking in the 2021 Journal Citation Reports by Clarivate Analytics. The journal is ranked 4th out of 174 in ecology journals and 11th out of 279 in environmental sciences journals. Its impact factor for 2021 is reported as 13.789, which further demonstrates its influence and importance in the scientific community.
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