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Community Science for Biodiversity Monitoring

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Chris and Mike found an ant colony. The ants are moving sticks and grass. ... Pine Trees in the Garden of Saint Paul Hospital Vincent Van Gogh. Now and Next ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Community Science for Biodiversity Monitoring


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Education outreach and data collection through
citizen science programs
  • Robert D. Stevenson
  • University of Massachusetts Boston
  • http//www.cs.umb.edu/efg/
  • robert.stevenson_at_umb.edu

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  • Broad public understanding of Science as a Way
    of Knowing and of environmental issues is poor
  • Citizen Science projects can improve this
    understanding because they engage people, foster
    inquiry, and improve domain specific knowledge
  • Citizen Science projects need a greater
    coordination among groups NGOs, Educators,
    Scientists, Scientific Societies and Software
    Engineers
  • Scientists can play a driving role, but we need
    new ways to organization themselves across
    traditional academic boundaries

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Nature and US
They divide the land into shares, so much for
nature and so much for people. This inevitable
leads to conflict. And since people are doing the
dividing you can be pretty sure which side will
win. We reveal our intentions by calling the
shares for nature, set-asides as if we were
merely holding them in reserve until we needed
them for later.
Diversitys best hope comes from what E.O. Wilson
calls biophilia. We all love nature. No one
wishes its demise. Rosenzweig Win-Win Ecology
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Slide of Tofel carton
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Parks orGardening Everywhere
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Education and Conservation
In his book Conservation Biology (1970) David
Ehrenfeld wrote (p. viii) "In order to want to
preserve something, one has to appreciate it
first,
  • and the number of people who are intimately
    familiar with natural landscapes outside of the
    city and with wild species other than rats and
    pigeons grows proportionately smaller every day".

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In fact, imagine if we taught baseball the way
we teach science. Until they were twelve,
children would read about baseball technique and
occasionally hear inspirational stories of the
great baseball players. . Undergraduates might
be allowed, under strict supervision, to
reproduce historic games. But only in graduate
school would they, at last, actually get to play
a game.  
Gopnik, Alison. 1999. The New York Review of
Books,
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Where are we?
  • World is getting full The impact of human
    activities are driving or starting to drive
    changes in the environment
  • There is a gap in perception between the what the
    environmental scientists and an the public
    (fossil fuel industry) understands.

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What is the Public Understanding of Climate
Change
  • Getting the information to the public?
  • Can the public perceive climate change?
  • What drives changes in society ?
  • Policy is often reactive, instead wouldnt a
    precautionary approach be better

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Citizen Science
  • Long History in US Christmas Bird Count
  • Cornells Laboratory of Ornithology is the leader
  • NE Wildflower Society

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Internet Opens up New Possibilities for Sharing
Information
  • Geo referenced environmental data is needed on a
    much finer scale scientists can not get this
    information by themselves
  • Specific projects - Monitoring Phenology,
    Invasive species and Biodiversity change

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Citizen Science Environmental Monitoring and
Discovery
  • Involve Citizens Community Based
  • Gets local people involved who understand the
    local context
  • Breaks down barriers with the scientific
    community
  • Not enough scientists to get the necessary data
    over broad temporal and spatial scales

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Dandelion Phenology
  • Worked with an elementary school teacher to
    develop a curriculum
  • Monitoring, community question and wonderment
    aspects
  • Built a website to share information
    www.dandelionbiology.org
  • Gave workshops to K-12 teachers
  • Start to analyze the data

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Taraxacum officinale
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Childrens comments - Mowing
  • My data has been half mowed by the lawn mowers!
  • Right when I came out the door to the courtyard
    I found out that most of my rosette was mowed.
    All that was left of my rosette was 11 leaves, 5
    broken stems and one clover. A long time ago my
    rosette looked like a forest, now it looks like a
    desert.
  • The mowers were nice and went around my
    rosette. My stem is 44 cm long. It is very cool.

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Childrens comments II
  • My rosette has one stem that has the new seed
    head. It is pushing the old flower up like a
    tooth. There are some ants around my rosette. The
    diameter of a flower close to my rosette is six
    centimeters. One of Sam's flowers has a stem two
    centimeters wide.
  • All my leaves have chicken pox. Well, it looks
    like that's what it is. They have red spots all
    over them.
  • There is a ton of worker ants going in and out
    of a deep hole with a ramp like entrance.

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Young Scientists at Work!
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Childrens comments III
  • I have 9 stems all total. Jillian has 22! My
    rosette is 43 cm in diameter. Mike's is 43 cm.
    His is only 1 cm longer than mine. The leaves on
    the mouse eared chickweed look like this. Drew
    plant. My rosette is 35 cm in diameter. I have 10
    dandelion flowers, and 8 opening flowers.
  • There is a fuzzy leaf that looks like polar
    bear fur.
  • The rosette next to mine is almost attached to
    mine. Chris and Mike found an ant colony. The
    ants are moving sticks and grass.

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"Forgive me if I never visit. I am from the
fields, you know, and while quite at home with
the dandelion, make a sorry figure in a drawing
room. Emily Dickinson
Pine Trees in the Garden of Saint Paul Hospital
Vincent Van Gogh
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Now and Next
  • Teachers like the project
  • 1st graders like to adopt a dandelion
  • Website was used but not sufficient yet
  • Develop the metadata side
  • Expand the curriculum
  • Greatly improve feedback and engagement
    teachers
  • Move to engage the scientific community

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Invasive Plants
  • Focus on new invasive
    Pepperweed Lepidium
    latifolium
  • Make a 2 page mini guide with worst offenders

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Coordinating Efforts
  • Working in K-12 setting
  • Know environmental educators
  • Community building takes more effort and time
    that originally envisioned- Need partners
  • Community can get data unattainable by
    scientists K-12 classes can do real Science
  • Scientists are skeptical of Community Science
    Need Metadata, Certification Process?

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Role for Scientists and Scientific Societies
  • Facilitate communication with the Science and
    Citizen Science partners over the Internet
    (distributed networks,W3C, XML,metadata
    standards, UDDI, semantic web)
  • Study the data and improve the quality of data
    collection
  • Certify Citizen Science projects What changes
    can we detect? Sophisticated statistical
    analyses Develop Quality Assurance Plan
  • Promote projects with the wider world through
    scientific societies. If communications were very
    good we might be able to all agreed through the
    AIBS or AAAS that we would focus our efforts on a
    small number of network projects

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Changes coming in Environmental Science
  • Move from single laboratory local field sites to
    multi investigator approaches as in Earth System
    Science (greatest challenge)
  • Develop real time embedded sensor networks to
    monitor environmental changes (drive
    collaboration) Goal is Environmental
    Forecasting.
  • Participate in NEON - National Environmental
    Observation Network
  • Create Intergovernmental Panel on Environmental
    Change IPEC

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Directions Predicted
  • Because of the magnitude of environmental change
    and the potential impacts on society, there will
    be greater efforts to come together across
    environmental sciences to meet these challenges
  • How do we manage without knowledge
  • Spend more effort communicating with the public
  • A Citizen Science Approach can help with both of
    these needs

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Acknowledgements Gary Alpert Susan Abruzzi Hui
Dong Jennifer Forman Peggy Laufer Robert
Morris Fred SaintOurs Sigrid Smith
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  • The first step to wisdom is getting things by
    their right names.
  • -Chinese Proverb

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Community Partners
  • Elementary Schools
  • Massachusetts Aububon Society
  • Field Naturalists
  • UMass Boston - Biology Department
  • Harvard - Musuem of Comparative Zoology
  • State of Massachusetts - Executive Office of
    Environmental Affairs
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