Improving sustainability of long-term amphibian monitoring: The value of collaboration and community science for indicator species management

Long-term monitoring is integral to assessing ecological trends, but fluctuations in funding, available resources, and institutional priorities present challenges to the sustainability of monitoring programs. Incorporating community science has the potential to increase the spatial and temporal exte...

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Main Authors: Wendy Estes-Zumpf, Brett Addis, Brenna Marsicek, Mason Lee, Zoe Nelson, Melanie Murphy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2022-01-01
Series:Ecological Indicators
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1470160X2101116X
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author Wendy Estes-Zumpf
Brett Addis
Brenna Marsicek
Mason Lee
Zoe Nelson
Melanie Murphy
author_facet Wendy Estes-Zumpf
Brett Addis
Brenna Marsicek
Mason Lee
Zoe Nelson
Melanie Murphy
author_sort Wendy Estes-Zumpf
collection DOAJ
description Long-term monitoring is integral to assessing ecological trends, but fluctuations in funding, available resources, and institutional priorities present challenges to the sustainability of monitoring programs. Incorporating community science has the potential to increase the spatial and temporal extent of monitoring efforts while minimizing cost and may be particularly useful for monitoring under-funded species such as amphibians. Concern over the reliability and integrity of data collected by volunteers, however, hampers broader use of community science in ecological monitoring. We assessed the quality of data collected by and the reliability of community scientists participating in a collaborative amphibian monitoring project requiring strict adherence to data collection protocols. Community scientists’ ability to correctly identify and detect species was on par with that of professional biologists. Agreement in species detected by community scientists and biologists ranged from 77% to 99% at sites surveyed by both surveyor types in the same season and modeled detection probabilities were similar for all but one species. Follow-through within a season was high. Since 2014, community scientists (n = 328) completed 75% of surveys to which they had committed. However, retention of community scientists across years was low, with 81% of participants only involved for one season. Community scientists offset agency resource limitations by conducting 32% of surveys and substantially contributed to meeting sample size goals. Furthermore, although time invested in project management and coordination increased with community science involvement, cost savings from field surveys and centralized coordination offset this increase. Our results suggest that with careful project planning and volunteer training, community scientists can contribute robust data to rigorous scientific studies, but project and participants’ goals must align to improve retention across years. Successful programs will require substantial investment by personnel for volunteer recruitment, training, data validation, and dissemination of results, however, involvement of community scientists can improve the sustainability of long-term monitoring programs through collaboration and cost savings. Our results support an increasing body of evidence that community science can contribute significantly to ecological monitoring even when considerable commitment and scientific rigor are essential.
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spelling doaj.art-1de6308bbb29447491ee2c98b0fdd8632022-12-21T18:12:49ZengElsevierEcological Indicators1470-160X2022-01-01134108451Improving sustainability of long-term amphibian monitoring: The value of collaboration and community science for indicator species managementWendy Estes-Zumpf0Brett Addis1Brenna Marsicek2Mason Lee3Zoe Nelson4Melanie Murphy5Wyoming Game and Fish Department, Laramie, WY 82070, USA; Corresponding author.Department of Ecosystem Science and Management, Program in Ecology, University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY 82071, USABiodiversity Institute, University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY 82071, USABiodiversity Institute, University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY 82071, USABiodiversity Institute, University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY 82071, USADepartment of Ecosystem Science and Management, Program in Ecology, University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY 82071, USALong-term monitoring is integral to assessing ecological trends, but fluctuations in funding, available resources, and institutional priorities present challenges to the sustainability of monitoring programs. Incorporating community science has the potential to increase the spatial and temporal extent of monitoring efforts while minimizing cost and may be particularly useful for monitoring under-funded species such as amphibians. Concern over the reliability and integrity of data collected by volunteers, however, hampers broader use of community science in ecological monitoring. We assessed the quality of data collected by and the reliability of community scientists participating in a collaborative amphibian monitoring project requiring strict adherence to data collection protocols. Community scientists’ ability to correctly identify and detect species was on par with that of professional biologists. Agreement in species detected by community scientists and biologists ranged from 77% to 99% at sites surveyed by both surveyor types in the same season and modeled detection probabilities were similar for all but one species. Follow-through within a season was high. Since 2014, community scientists (n = 328) completed 75% of surveys to which they had committed. However, retention of community scientists across years was low, with 81% of participants only involved for one season. Community scientists offset agency resource limitations by conducting 32% of surveys and substantially contributed to meeting sample size goals. Furthermore, although time invested in project management and coordination increased with community science involvement, cost savings from field surveys and centralized coordination offset this increase. Our results suggest that with careful project planning and volunteer training, community scientists can contribute robust data to rigorous scientific studies, but project and participants’ goals must align to improve retention across years. Successful programs will require substantial investment by personnel for volunteer recruitment, training, data validation, and dissemination of results, however, involvement of community scientists can improve the sustainability of long-term monitoring programs through collaboration and cost savings. Our results support an increasing body of evidence that community science can contribute significantly to ecological monitoring even when considerable commitment and scientific rigor are essential.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1470160X2101116XAmphibiansCommunity scienceDetectionSustainability
spellingShingle Wendy Estes-Zumpf
Brett Addis
Brenna Marsicek
Mason Lee
Zoe Nelson
Melanie Murphy
Improving sustainability of long-term amphibian monitoring: The value of collaboration and community science for indicator species management
Ecological Indicators
Amphibians
Community science
Detection
Sustainability
title Improving sustainability of long-term amphibian monitoring: The value of collaboration and community science for indicator species management
title_full Improving sustainability of long-term amphibian monitoring: The value of collaboration and community science for indicator species management
title_fullStr Improving sustainability of long-term amphibian monitoring: The value of collaboration and community science for indicator species management
title_full_unstemmed Improving sustainability of long-term amphibian monitoring: The value of collaboration and community science for indicator species management
title_short Improving sustainability of long-term amphibian monitoring: The value of collaboration and community science for indicator species management
title_sort improving sustainability of long term amphibian monitoring the value of collaboration and community science for indicator species management
topic Amphibians
Community science
Detection
Sustainability
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1470160X2101116X
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