3.8 Article

ENM2020: A FREE ONLINE COURSE AND SET OF RESOURCES ON MODELING SPECIES NICHES AND DISTRIBUTIONS

Journal

BIODIVERSITY INFORMATICS
Volume 17, Issue -, Pages 1-9

Publisher

UNIV KANSAS, NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM & BIODIVERSITY RESEARCH CTR
DOI: 10.17161/bi.v17i.15016

Keywords

Ecological niche model; Species distribution model; Course; Open access; Methods

Funding

  1. U.S. National Science Foundation [DBI-1661510, IIA-1920946]
  2. National Aeronautics and Space Administration [80NSSC18K0406]
  3. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science Postdoctoral Fellowship for Foreign Researchers

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This article introduces an English-language course on the underlying theory and methods in the field of distributional ecology, which lasted for 43 weeks and engaged with over 2500 participants globally. The hierarchical and modular format of the course allows for updates, corrections, and reuse, and all course materials are freely and openly accessible.
The field of distributional ecology has seen considerable recent attention, particularly surrounding the theory, protocols, and tools for Ecological Niche Modeling (ENM) or Species Distribution Modeling (SDM). Such analyses have grown steadily over the past two decades-including a maturation of relevant theory and key concepts-but methodological consensus has yet to be reached. In response, and following an online course taught in Spanish in 2018, we designed a comprehensive English-language course covering much of the underlying theory and methods currently applied in this broad field. Here, we summarize that course, ENM2020, and provide links by which resources produced for it can be accessed into the future. ENM2020 lasted 43 weeks, with presentations from 52 instructors, who engaged with >2500 participants globally through >14,000 hours of viewing and >90,000 views of instructional video and question-and-answer sessions. Each major topic was introduced by an Overview talk, followed by more detailed lectures on subtopics. The hierarchical and modular format of the course permits updates, corrections, or alternative viewpoints, and generally facilitates revision and reuse, including the use of only the Overview lectures for introductory courses. All course materials are free and openly accessible (CC-BY license) to ensure these resources remain available to all interested in distributional ecology.

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