“Ready! Set! Lichen!”: a citizen-science campaign for lichens, against the odds of success

Citizen science has successfully contributed lichen records to air pollution assessments and for detecting biodiversity hotspots, while its potential to survey broad lichen distributions and trends in natural ecosystems is less clear. The main issue is whether non-professional observers would be wil...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biodiversity and conservation 2023-12, Vol.32 (14), p.4753-4765
Hauptverfasser: Lõhmus, Piret, Degtjarenko, Polina, Lotman, Silvia, Copoț, Ovidiu, Rosenvald, Raul, Lõhmus, Asko
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container_end_page 4765
container_issue 14
container_start_page 4753
container_title Biodiversity and conservation
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creator Lõhmus, Piret
Degtjarenko, Polina
Lotman, Silvia
Copoț, Ovidiu
Rosenvald, Raul
Lõhmus, Asko
description Citizen science has successfully contributed lichen records to air pollution assessments and for detecting biodiversity hotspots, while its potential to survey broad lichen distributions and trends in natural ecosystems is less clear. The main issue is whether non-professional observers would be willing to visit remote areas to record inconspicuous organisms. We launched a nationwide citizen science campaign “Ready! Set! Lichen!” in Estonia (Northern Europe) that focused on collecting digital photo-based data on lichen distributions comparatively on live trees in forests versus in cut-over sites. Altogether 1101 trees were surveyed by 362 participants. Of all observations, 86% were acceptable and revealed 86 species plus 33 morphospecies as identified by experts. For a test set of selected 12 common epiphytic species, the campaign expanded their known national distributions on average 13%, independently of their conspicuousness (thallus type). Our results indicated that a mass participation approach of citizen science: (i) can provide significant data to monitoring broad-scale population trends of common forest lichens, but the contributions remained small regarding (ii) the knowledge on rare and sparsely distributed habitat specialists and (iii) ecological factors behind the distributions (due to difficulties in keeping valid sampling design). We conclude that citizen-science projects on inconspicuous highly diverse taxon groups can contribute to conservation research if these projects are specifically designed for feasible goals, and we outline six main areas of application for lichen studies.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s10531-023-02724-6
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subjects Air pollution
Biodiversity
Biological diversity
Biomedical and Life Sciences
citizen science
Climate Change/Climate Change Impacts
Conservation Biology/Ecology
Ecology
Ecosystems
epiphytes
Estonia
Forests
Habitats
Lichens
Life Sciences
morphospecies
Northern European region
Original Research
thallus
Trees
title “Ready! Set! Lichen!”: a citizen-science campaign for lichens, against the odds of success
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