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Engaging citizens to monitor pollinators through a nationwide BioBlitz: Lessons learned and challenges remaining after four years

Pollination is a key mutualistic interaction between animals and flowering plants, generating biodiversity and providing valuable ecosystem services. However, a pollination crisis occurs because anthropogenic disturbance affects pollinators and their habitats, risking biodiversity and food security....

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Published in:Biological conservation 2024-12, Vol.300, p.110868, Article 110868
Main Authors: Fontúrbel, Francisco E., García, José P.A., Celis-Diez, Juan L., Murúa, Maureen M., Vieli, Lorena, Díaz-Forestier, Javiera
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container_title Biological conservation
container_volume 300
creator Fontúrbel, Francisco E.
García, José P.A.
Celis-Diez, Juan L.
Murúa, Maureen M.
Vieli, Lorena
Díaz-Forestier, Javiera
description Pollination is a key mutualistic interaction between animals and flowering plants, generating biodiversity and providing valuable ecosystem services. However, a pollination crisis occurs because anthropogenic disturbance affects pollinators and their habitats, risking biodiversity and food security. Also, the lack of evidence-based knowledge may worsen disturbance effects by delaying decision-making and conservation actions. Citizen science plays an important role in data gathering by engaging volunteers in obtaining such information. Here, we present the results of four years of pollinator occurrence data from a series of targeted BioBlitz events conducted each November from 2020 to 2023 in Chile. We obtained a total of 6327 records (identified to the species or genus level), corresponding to 569 species from 44 families, collected along the Chilean territory, a 10-fold increase compared to the pre-BioBlitz period (2016–2019). The most frequent species were the butterfly Vanessa carye, the invasive bees Bombus terrestris and Apis mellifera, and the native bumblebee Bombus dahlbomii. Despite inter-annual abundance fluctuations, species composition was similar over time. The most recorded families were Apidae, Syrphidade, Nymphalidae, and Buprestidae. This nationwide multi-year citizen science survey allowed us to collect an impressive dataset that would have been unattainable by scientists alone. Furthermore, we obtained valuable information for monitoring threatened (e.g., B. dahlbomii) or invasive species (e.g., B. terrestris) over space and time, aiding decision-making and conservation efforts. Engaging people in pollinator monitoring strengthens human-nature connections and fosters conservation attitudes. [Display omitted] •Among pollination threats, the lack of evidence-based information is critical.•Citizen science engages volunteers in gathering data for scientific research.•Our BioBlitz campaigns gathered data from 569 pollinator species over four years.•Citizen science data may be helpful to track the spread of invasive pollinators.•These initiatives inform conservation practice and create awareness in the population.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.biocon.2024.110868
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source ScienceDirect Journals
subjects anthropogenic activities
Apidae
Apis mellifera
Bombus dahlbomii
Bombus terrestris
Buprestidae
butterflies
Chile
Citizen science
data collection
decision making
ecosystems
food security
genus
invasive species
Knowledge gaps
Pollination
pollinators
space and time
species
species diversity
surveys
Syrphidae
Urban areas
Vanessa
title Engaging citizens to monitor pollinators through a nationwide BioBlitz: Lessons learned and challenges remaining after four years
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