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Concurrent Butterfly, Bat and Small Mammal Monitoring Programmes Using Citizen Science in Catalonia (NE Spain): A Historical Review and Future Directions

Journal

DIVERSITY-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/d13090454

Keywords

bioindicators; volunteers; sampling protocols; species diversity; conservation; population trends

Funding

  1. Catalan Government (Generalitat de Catalunya) [DB201804]
  2. Barcelona Provincial Council (Diputacio de Barcelona) [2015/3456, 2019/0007297]

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The text outlines the long-term faunal monitoring programs led by the Biodiversity and Bioindicators research group in Catalonia, with a focus on butterfly, bat, small mammal, and dormouse monitoring schemes. These programs provide essential data for conservation efforts and land management decisions.
The Biodiversity and Bioindicators research group (BiBIO), based at the Natural Sciences Museum of Granollers, has coordinated four long-term faunal monitoring programmes based on citizen science over more than two decades in Catalonia (NE Spain). We summarize the historical progress of these programmes, describing their main conservation outputs, the challenges overcome, and future directions. The Catalan Butterfly Monitoring Scheme (CBMS) consists of a network of nearly 200 recording sites where butterfly populations have been monitored through visual censuses along transects for nearly three decades. This programme provides accurate temporal and spatial changes in the abundance of butterflies and relates them to different environmental factors (e.g., habitat and weather conditions). The Bat Monitoring Programme has progressively evolved to include passive acoustic monitoring protocols, as well as bat box-, underground- and river-bat surveys, and community ecological indices have been developed to monitor bat responses at assemblage level to both landscape and climatic changes. The Monitoring of common small mammals in Spain (SEMICE), a common small mammal monitoring programme with almost 80 active live-trapping stations, provides information to estimate population trends and has underlined the relevance of small mammals as both prey (of several predators) and predators (of insect forest pests). The Dormouse Monitoring Programme represents the first monitoring programme in Europe using specific nest boxes for the edible dormouse, providing information about biological and demographic data of the species at the southern limit of its distribution range. The combination and complementarity of these monitoring programmes provide crucial data to land managers to improve the understanding of conservation needs and develop efficient protection laws.

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