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The Australian Roadkill Reporting Project—Applying Integrated Professional Research and Citizen Science to Monitor and Mitigate Roadkill in Australia

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Australia has no database of national roadkill. The current research project fills that knowledge gap by developing a roadkill reporting application that enables professional and citizen scientists to record photographs of roadkill with location, time and date. This embodies the conc...

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Autores principales: Englefield, Bruce, Starling, Melissa, Wilson, Bethany, Roder, Caidyrn, McGreevy, Paul
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7401535/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32610525
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10071112
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author Englefield, Bruce
Starling, Melissa
Wilson, Bethany
Roder, Caidyrn
McGreevy, Paul
author_facet Englefield, Bruce
Starling, Melissa
Wilson, Bethany
Roder, Caidyrn
McGreevy, Paul
author_sort Englefield, Bruce
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Australia has no database of national roadkill. The current research project fills that knowledge gap by developing a roadkill reporting application that enables professional and citizen scientists to record photographs of roadkill with location, time and date. This embodies the concept of ‘One Welfare’ as it affects humans, animals and the environment. Uploaded to a website, these data can identify roadkill hotspots, tabulate species of animals killed and potentially be used for ecological studies of roadkill numbers, species distribution, population trends, animal behaviour and disease. Initial results indicate that mammal roadkill mostly occurs at night and that of birds and reptiles during daytime. Mammals make up three-quarters of the roadkill recorded and this includes endangered species. Two examples of roadkill hotspots are shown in Queensland and Tasmania. These will enable further research to suggest how roadkill mitigation measures may be optimally employed. ABSTRACT: Australia has no national roadkill monitoring scheme. To address this gap in knowledge, a roadkill reporting application (app) was developed to allow members of the public to join professional researchers in gathering Australian data. The app is used to photograph roadkill and simultaneously records the GPS location, time and date. These data are uploaded immediately to a website for data management. To illustrate the capacity to facilitate cost-effective mitigation measures the article focuses on two roadkill hotspots—in Queensland and Tasmania. In total, 1609 reports were gathered in the first three months of the project. They include data on mammals (n = 1203, 75%), birds (n = 125, 7.8%), reptiles (n = 79, 4.9%), amphibians (n = 4, 0.025%), unidentified (n = 189, 11.8%) and unserviceable ones (n = 9). A significant finding is variance in the distribution of mammals and birds at different times of day. These findings reflect diurnal variation in the activity levels of different species and underline the need for data on a targeted species to be collected at appropriate times of day. By continuing to facilitate roadkill monitoring, it is anticipated that the data generated by the app will directly increase knowledge of roadkill numbers and hotspots. Indirectly, it will provide value-added information on animal behaviour, disease and population dynamics as well as for species distribution mapping.
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spelling pubmed-74015352020-08-07 The Australian Roadkill Reporting Project—Applying Integrated Professional Research and Citizen Science to Monitor and Mitigate Roadkill in Australia Englefield, Bruce Starling, Melissa Wilson, Bethany Roder, Caidyrn McGreevy, Paul Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Australia has no database of national roadkill. The current research project fills that knowledge gap by developing a roadkill reporting application that enables professional and citizen scientists to record photographs of roadkill with location, time and date. This embodies the concept of ‘One Welfare’ as it affects humans, animals and the environment. Uploaded to a website, these data can identify roadkill hotspots, tabulate species of animals killed and potentially be used for ecological studies of roadkill numbers, species distribution, population trends, animal behaviour and disease. Initial results indicate that mammal roadkill mostly occurs at night and that of birds and reptiles during daytime. Mammals make up three-quarters of the roadkill recorded and this includes endangered species. Two examples of roadkill hotspots are shown in Queensland and Tasmania. These will enable further research to suggest how roadkill mitigation measures may be optimally employed. ABSTRACT: Australia has no national roadkill monitoring scheme. To address this gap in knowledge, a roadkill reporting application (app) was developed to allow members of the public to join professional researchers in gathering Australian data. The app is used to photograph roadkill and simultaneously records the GPS location, time and date. These data are uploaded immediately to a website for data management. To illustrate the capacity to facilitate cost-effective mitigation measures the article focuses on two roadkill hotspots—in Queensland and Tasmania. In total, 1609 reports were gathered in the first three months of the project. They include data on mammals (n = 1203, 75%), birds (n = 125, 7.8%), reptiles (n = 79, 4.9%), amphibians (n = 4, 0.025%), unidentified (n = 189, 11.8%) and unserviceable ones (n = 9). A significant finding is variance in the distribution of mammals and birds at different times of day. These findings reflect diurnal variation in the activity levels of different species and underline the need for data on a targeted species to be collected at appropriate times of day. By continuing to facilitate roadkill monitoring, it is anticipated that the data generated by the app will directly increase knowledge of roadkill numbers and hotspots. Indirectly, it will provide value-added information on animal behaviour, disease and population dynamics as well as for species distribution mapping. MDPI 2020-06-29 /pmc/articles/PMC7401535/ /pubmed/32610525 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10071112 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Englefield, Bruce
Starling, Melissa
Wilson, Bethany
Roder, Caidyrn
McGreevy, Paul
The Australian Roadkill Reporting Project—Applying Integrated Professional Research and Citizen Science to Monitor and Mitigate Roadkill in Australia
title The Australian Roadkill Reporting Project—Applying Integrated Professional Research and Citizen Science to Monitor and Mitigate Roadkill in Australia
title_full The Australian Roadkill Reporting Project—Applying Integrated Professional Research and Citizen Science to Monitor and Mitigate Roadkill in Australia
title_fullStr The Australian Roadkill Reporting Project—Applying Integrated Professional Research and Citizen Science to Monitor and Mitigate Roadkill in Australia
title_full_unstemmed The Australian Roadkill Reporting Project—Applying Integrated Professional Research and Citizen Science to Monitor and Mitigate Roadkill in Australia
title_short The Australian Roadkill Reporting Project—Applying Integrated Professional Research and Citizen Science to Monitor and Mitigate Roadkill in Australia
title_sort australian roadkill reporting project—applying integrated professional research and citizen science to monitor and mitigate roadkill in australia
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7401535/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32610525
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10071112
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