Equivalence of citizen science and scientific data for modelling species distribution of birds from a tropical savanna

Author:

Santos Eduardo Guimarães1ORCID,Wiederhecker Helga Correa2ORCID,Lopes Leonardo Esteves3ORCID,Marini Miguel Ângelo4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Programa de Pós‐graduação em Ecologia, Instituto de Ciências Biológicas Universidade de Brasília Brasília Brazil

2. Independent Researcher Brasília Brazil

3. Laboratório de Biologia Animal, IBF Universidade Federal de Viçosa – Campus Florestal Florestal Brazil

4. Departamento de Zoologia, Instituto de Ciências Biológicas Universidade de Brasília Brasília Brazil

Abstract

AbstractThe Wallacean deficit continues to be a challenge to species distribution modelling. Although some authors have suggested that data collected by citizen scientists can be relevant for a better understanding of biodiversity, to our knowledge, no work has quantitatively tested the equivalence between scientific and citizen science data. Here, we investigate the hypothesis that data collected by citizen scientists can be equivalent to data collected by professional scientists when generating species spatial distribution models. For 42 bird species in the Cerrado region we generated and compared species distribution models based on three data sources: (1) scientific data, (2) citizen science data and (3) sample size corrected citizen science data. To test our hypothesis, we compared the equivalence of these datasets. We rejected the hypothesis of equivalence for about one‐third (38%) of the evaluated species, revealing that, for most of the species considered, the models generated were equivalent irrespective of the data set used. The distances between centroids of the models that were equivalent were on average smaller than the distances between non‐equivalent models. Also, the direction of change in the models showed no pattern, with no trend towards more populated regions. Our results show that the use of data collected by citizen scientists can be an ally in filling the Wallacean deficit gap. In fact, the lack of use of this wide range of data collected by citizen scientists seems to be an unjustified caution. We indicate the potential of using citizen science data for modelling the distribution of species, mainly due to the large set of data collected, which is impracticable for scientists alone to collect. Conservation measures will be favoured by the union of professional and amateur data, aiming for a better understanding of species distribution and, consequently, biodiversity conservation.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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