Opportunities and challenges for monitoring a recolonizing large herbivore using citizen science

Author:

Ostermann‐Miyashita Emu‐Felicitas12ORCID,Bluhm Hendrik3ORCID,Dobiáš Kornelia4,Gandl Nina5,Hibler Sophia2ORCID,Look Samantha5,Michler Frank‐Uwe6ORCID,Weltgen Leonie5,Smaga Aleksandra7,König Hannes J.1ORCID,Kuemmerle Tobias3ORCID,Kiffner Christian2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Life Sciences Thaer‐Institute of Agricultural and Horticultural Sciences, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin Berlin Germany

2. Leibniz Centre for Agricultural Landscape Research (ZALF) Müncheberg Germany

3. Geography Department Humboldt‐Universität zu Berlin Berlin Germany

4. Landesbetrieb Forst Brandenburg Abt. 4 Landeskompetenzzentrum Forst Eberswalde (LFE) Eberswalde Germany

5. WWF Deutschland Berlin Germany

6. Faculty of Forest and Environment Eberswalde University for Sustainable Development Eberswalde Germany

7. Zachodniopomorskie Towarzystwo Przyrodnicze Dzika Zagroda Mirosławiec Poland

Abstract

AbstractMonitoring is a prerequisite for evidence‐based wildlife management and conservation planning, yet conventional monitoring approaches are often ineffective for species occurring at low densities. However, some species such as large mammals are often observed by lay people and this information can be leveraged through citizen science monitoring schemes. To ensure that such wildlife monitoring efforts provide robust inferences, assessing the quantity, quality, and potential biases of citizen science data is crucial. For Eurasian moose (Alces alces), a species currently recolonizing north‐eastern Germany and occurring in very low numbers, we applied three citizen science tools: a mail/email report system, a smartphone application, and a webpage. Among these monitoring tools, the mail/email report system yielded the greatest number of moose reports in absolute and in standardized (corrected for time effort) terms. The reported moose were predominantly identified as single, adult, male individuals, and reports occurred mostly during late summer. Overlaying citizen science data with independently generated habitat suitability and connectivity maps showed that members of the public detected moose in suitable habitats but not necessarily in movement corridors. Also, moose detections were often recorded near roads, suggestive of spatial bias in the sampling effort. Our results suggest that citizen science‐based data collection can be facilitated by brief, intuitive digital reporting systems. However, inference from the resulting data can be limited due to unquantified and possibly biased sampling effort. To overcome these challenges, we offer specific recommendations such as more structured monitoring efforts involving the public in areas likely to be roamed by moose for improving quantity, quality, and analysis of citizen science‐based data for making robust inferences.

Funder

Japan Student Services Organization

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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