The document discusses citizen science projects at the Natural History Museum in London. It describes several contributory projects where citizens collect data, including on bluebell flowering times and trees. Co-created projects are also discussed, such as monitoring river quality with fishermen and creating a species inventory in partnership with volunteers. The benefits of citizen science are highlighted at the scientific, human, and policy levels. Challenges and opportunities for citizen science are also reviewed.
Citizen science at the NHM explores biodiversity monitoring
1. Citizen science at the NHM
Dr John Tweddle & Lucy Robinson
Angela Marmont Centre for UK Biodiversity
2. Natural history and citizen science = a perfect match
Long-history of voluntary involvement, esp. UK
And currently a real convergence of scientific,
policy and public interests – raised profile
• Scientific level - many critical questions require
large observational datasets, growing trust in data
• Human level – we’re very good at observing
nature, are interested and willing to get involved
• Policy level – explicit recognition of the need to
involve citizens in monitoring and protection
• Technology is opening up new opportunities
Exciting and dynamic field!
3. Citizen science at the NHM, London
Focus on increasing our shared understanding of the UK’s biodiversity & environment
>10 years expt.
Techniques
Motivations
Expectations
Research
Society
Practitioners
4. Contributory, adults: Bluebells
• Are flowering times responding to climate change?
• Is native bluebell under threat from non-native taxa?
• What is the nature of the threat?
• How do we manage the situation?
[Dr Fred Rumsey, Dr Mark Spencer]
5. Contributory, schools: Tree School
• Partnership with Cothill Education Trust
• Introduction to science & scientists
• Immersive experience, molecular research
[Dr Della Hopkins, Dr James Tosh, Dr Fred Rumsey]
6. Co-created: the Riverflies Project
• 2 million fishermen in UK
• 80,000 fly fishermen – who care about ‘their’ rivers
• Learning new skills in a familiar setting
• On-going monitoring by this volunteer network
• Providing data on river ecology and water quality
[Dr Steve Brooks, Bridget Peacock, Dr Gill Stevens]
7. Co-created: the UK Species Inventory
• Partnership with voluntary recording sector – taxonomic expertise, practitioners
• Two-way knowledge sharing and UK biodiversity research...citizen science?
[Chris Raper, Dr John Tweddle, Charles Hussey]
8. Crowd-sourcing environmental understanding
OPAL www.opalexplorenature.org
• UK’s most ambitious programme to date
• 2007-2013, £14M UK Lottery funded, 15 partners
• What is the state of England’s environment?
• 6 contributory surveys, BioBlitzes etc
• Reconnecting participants with nature
• Multiple entry routes
• >500,000 participants, >1 million observations
• Many participants are ‘new to science’
9. Investigating data quality
• Experience level, age, group size effects, variation between taxa...
• Validation and verification methods
• Impacts of different data capture methods
Method Correct ID Incorrect ID
Web upload 77 % 23 %
Direct from App 43 % 57 %
[Dr Poppy Lakeman-Fraser, Lucy Robinson]
10. Understanding citizen science & environmental monitoring
NERC-CEH, NHM for UK-
EOF partnership
- Academic report
- Practitioners guide
Systematic review
Detailed case studies
Interviews with end users
Motivations of volunteers
Available technologies
Experience-based guide
[Dr Helen Roy, Dr Michael Pocock, Dr John Tweddle, Lucy
Robinson and many others – thank you to all that contributed!]
11. Contributory projects Co-created projects:
• Capture imagination of a broad audience • Benefit from establishment of a
or appeal to an existing membership community/volunteer-led approach
• Have a clear goal & methodology • All parties have a stake/adapt
• Require large, dispersed datasets • Require deep, on-going
commitment
• Regular phenomena or watching brief
• Are targeted at a specific, locally
• Require large analyses suited to humans relevant problem or question
One size does not fit all! There are clear roles for different
approaches, participants want to interact in different ways and
require different forms of support and reward...data & audience
12. Challenges / opportunities
• Working smartly
• Maximising science benefits
• Sharing ideas: what does & doesn’t work
• Joint targeting of key challenges
• Presenting a consistent message
• Not reinventing the wheel
• Practitioner network(s)
• Making the most of new technologies
• Avoiding participant fatigue
A lot of the questions we ask as natural historians fit well with a citsci approach
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Mix of scientist and public-led
So that’s an introduction to some of the areas of citizen science that we’re working on here at the NHM. We’d like to spend the remaining few minutes overviewing a recent collaborative research project that we’ve been involved in.It pulls together lessons learnt by us and wide range of other citsci practitioners
So if you’re looking to develop a new project it’s worth spending time evaluating options and approaches – and well worth not reinventing the wheel for innovations sake
There’s a lot more in both documents and please get in touch with us or co-authors at CEH if you’ve any questions or comments.I’d like to leave you with what we see as some key challenges for us as practitioners