4.7 Article

Participatory Monitoring-A Citizen Science Approach for Coastal Environments

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE
Volume 8, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2021.681969

Keywords

citizen science; coastal ecosystems; biodiversity; community engagement; ocean literacy

Funding

  1. Sao Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP) [2017/50220-8]
  2. National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) [153196/2018-1]
  3. British Council - Newton Fund Grant Agreement Institutional Links [332425662]

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The authors of this article shared their experiences, results, and lessons learned from creating a coastal biodiversity participatory monitoring initiative. The study found that with proper training, citizen scientists have the potential to contribute valuable biodiversity data. Despite some differences between specialists and participants, the data collected by citizen scientists was deemed reliable with appropriate protocols.
In this article the authors share their experiences, results, and lessons learned during the creation of a coastal biodiversity participatory monitoring initiative. Throughout 2019, we delivered five training workshops to 51 citizen scientists. Data collected by the citizens scientists were validated by checking its similarities against that gathered by specialists. High similarity values were found, indicating that, if proper training is provided, there is a great potential for citizen scientists to contribute biodiversity data with high value. During this process a certain level of variation in data produced by specialists was found, drawing attention to the need for prior alignment among specialists who may offer training for citizens. In addition, despite overall similar results between specialists and participants, some differences emerged in particular parts of the habitat; for example, the bivalve zones presented higher complexity and hence greater challenge. Identifying key challenges for participants is key to developing appropriate citizen science protocols. Here it is provided preliminary evidence that supports the use of the monitoring protocol to obtain biodiversity data gathered by citizen scientists, assuring its scientific quality. Enhancing participation by the community and specialists is key to further validate the approach and to effectively expand such protocols, enhancing the level of biodiversity data collection. In order to promote participation, and maintain citizen scientist engagement in the initiative, it is recommended the development of new investigations that assess the interests and motivations of the public to take part. It is also fundamentally important to have an effective strategy to communicate the results of participants' monitoring and their applicability to local and global issues, thus maximizing the continuity of engagement of citizen scientists.

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