AUSSIES PROVIDE MORE THAN 62 MILLION SPECIES RECORDS FOR CONSERVATION RESEARCH

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Atlas of Living Australia (ALA) shows that citizen science is now more important than ever in helping to better understand Australia’s rich biodiversity.

Citizen scientists have contributed more than half of all species records to Australia’s national biodiversity database – the Atlas of Living Australia (ALA) – and play a crucial role in supporting conversation and biodiversity research, a new study has found.

This equates to more than 62 million out of a total of 125 million species records in the ALA, which is hosted by Australia’s national science agency, CSIRO, and funded by the National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy (NCRIS).

Dr Erin Roger, ALA’s Citizen Science Lead, said citizen science is the practice of the general public volunteering to engage in science, and offers enormous potential in filling knowledge gaps of many underrepresented species.

“More than 9.6 million new species occurrence records were added to the ALA from citizen scientists in 2022 alone,” Dr Roger said.

“In some cases, citizen science data make up the majority of public data records for species, like the Black Rockcod (Epinephelus daemelii) where 63 per cent of all records come from citizen scientists.

“By contributing data records about species found in Australia, we can better reflect the global changes in species distribution and abundance and be more equipped with information to tackle potential extinctions and mitigate biodiversity loss.”

All records in the ALA, which aggregates records from more than 850 data providers, feed into the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF), an international network that provides anyone, anywhere, open access to data about all types of life on Earth.

Through the contributions of citizen scientists feeding into open-access databases like the ALA and GBIF, often this is where incursions of invasive species are first detected.

“Citizen science is a global movement and through improved technologies and the ability to integrate with other datasets to create ‘big data,’ this will help to solve some of the biggest ecological questions and ultimately deliver better species outcomes,” Dr Roger said.

Currently, birds account for about 50 per cent of all citizen science data records in ALA.

ALA Director, Dr Andre Zerger, said birds currently accounted for about 50 per cent of all data records, followed by vascular plants at 31 per cent, while fungi are one of the lowest represented taxonomic groups at just 1.4 per cent of records.

“Currently citizen science practices tend to favour large, brightly coloured, charismatic species,” Dr Zerger said.

“Therefore, it’s no surprise that birds in city areas are vastly overrepresented in data records while groups like invertebrates, fungi and non-vascular plants or species in remote areas are severely lacking in data.

“There’s so much untapped potential for scientific output from open-source data infrastructures like the ALA and around the world.

“Improving how we better target observations to build a truly representative national biodiversity data system is the next frontier.”

The paper, Open Access Research Infrastructures are Critical for Improving the Accessibility and Utility of Citizen Science: A Case Study of Australia’s National Biodiversity Infrastructure, the Atlas of Living Australia (ALA) Open Access was published in Citizen Science: Theory and Practice.

Learn how to become a citizen scientist and help contribute data to create a more detailed picture of Australia’s biodiversity.

 

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