4.0 Article

Overview of Mitaraka survey: research frame, study site and field protocols

Journal

ZOOSYSTEMA
Volume 40, Issue -, Pages 327-365

Publisher

PUBLICATIONS SCIENTIFIQUES DU MUSEUM, PARIS
DOI: 10.5252/zoosystema2018v40a13

Keywords

Tumuc Humac; Guiana Shield; Amazonian forest; ATBI; sampling strategy; collecting methods; taxonomic impediment; invertebrates; inventory

Categories

Funding

  1. European Fund for Regional Development (ERDF)
  2. Conseil regional de Guyane
  3. Direction de l'Environnement, de l'Amenagement et du Logement
  4. ministere de l'Education nationale, de l'Enseignement superieur et de la Recherche
  5. Conseil general de Guyane

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This article introduces the biodiversity survey Our Planet Reviewed in the south of French Guiana organized in February-March and August 2015. It has enabled more than 50 scientists to inventory the following groups: Actinopterygii, Amphibia, Annelida, Arachnida, Insecta, Mollusca and Squamata, with a particular effort on diverse and little-known orders, such as Coleoptera, Diptera, Hemiptera and Hymenoptera. The forested area under investigation presents a mosaic of hills and insclbergs, with a wide variety of ecosystems. The main objectives were to discover new species for science, report first records for French Guiana, and establish a baseline inventory for biogeographic studies. The organisation of the field trip and post-field phase are supported by coordinators of major taxonomic groups. Authorisations and associated commitments, including Access and Benefit Sharing (ABS) are specified. The sampling effort, in terms of number and diversity of methods, is certainly the largest ever made in French Guiana over a short period of time. Thirteen different trap types were used including four types of interception traps and nine types of attraction-based traps. Active research methods (13 techniques) and extraction from the substrate (five techniques, including Winkler sieves, emergence from dead wood, etc.) completed the sampling array. The sample processing procedure describes the difference between active collecting and the longer and more complex process of processing massive samples of traps such as window pane flight intercept traps, Malaise traps, colored pan traps and automatic light traps. After a sorting phase that lasted less than a year for most groups, a network of 165 taxonomic experts was mobilized by the coordinators to study the sorted specimens. The data are stored and managed in an observations database and in the database of the collections of the Museum national d'Histoire naturelle (Paris). Data are widely disseminated, notably in France via the Inventaire national du Patrimoine naturel (INPN) and internationally by the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF). This introductory article will be supplemented by a second paper, which will analyse research results three years after the survey and assess the effectiveness of the expedition in advancing taxonomic knowledge.

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