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Practice makes the expert: The importance of training volunteers in the generation of phenological data from photographs of biodiversity observation platforms

Phenology studies the time at which events in the life cycle of a species occur sand how they are related to environmental cues. Patterns of change in phenology at different scales can be used as an indicator of ecosystem changes and climate change, but the data necessary to detect these changes can...

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Autores principales: Salomé-Díaz, Julieta, Golubov, Jordan, Díaz-Segura, Omar, Ramírez-Gutiérrez, Ma. Cristina, Sifuentes de la Torre, Sarah, Koleff, Patricia, Quintero, Esther, Martínez, Armando Jesús
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9990930/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36881607
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0282750
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author Salomé-Díaz, Julieta
Golubov, Jordan
Díaz-Segura, Omar
Ramírez-Gutiérrez, Ma. Cristina
Sifuentes de la Torre, Sarah
Koleff, Patricia
Quintero, Esther
Martínez, Armando Jesús
author_facet Salomé-Díaz, Julieta
Golubov, Jordan
Díaz-Segura, Omar
Ramírez-Gutiérrez, Ma. Cristina
Sifuentes de la Torre, Sarah
Koleff, Patricia
Quintero, Esther
Martínez, Armando Jesús
author_sort Salomé-Díaz, Julieta
collection PubMed
description Phenology studies the time at which events in the life cycle of a species occur sand how they are related to environmental cues. Patterns of change in phenology at different scales can be used as an indicator of ecosystem changes and climate change, but the data necessary to detect these changes can be difficult to obtain due to their temporal and regional dimensions. Citizen science can contribute to generate large amounts of data on phenological changes at wide geographical scales that would be almost impossible for professional scientists to generate, but the quality and reliability of these data are often questioned. The objective of this study was to evaluate the use of a biodiversity observation citizen science platform based on photographic information as a potential source of large-scale phenological information, and to identify the key benefits and limitations of this type of information source. We used the Naturalista photographic databases for two invasive species in a tropical region: Leonotis nepetifolia and Nicotiana glauca. The photographs were classified into different phenophases (initial growth, immature flower, mature flower, dry fruit) by three groups of volunteers: a group of experts, a trained group with information on the biology and phenology of both species, and an untrained group. The degree of reliability of the phenological classifications was estimated for each group of volunteers and each phenophase. The degree of reliability of the phenological classification of the untrained group was generally very low for all phenophases. The group of trained volunteers showed accuracy levels for the reproductive phenophases that equaled the degree of reliability among the expert group, regardless of species, and was consistent across phenophases. We conclude that volunteer classification of photographic information contained in biodiversity observation platforms can provide phenological information with high geographic coverage and an increasing temporal coverage on general phenological patterns of species with wide distributions but has limited applicability in the identification of exact start and end dates. and peaks of the different phenophases.
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spelling pubmed-99909302023-03-08 Practice makes the expert: The importance of training volunteers in the generation of phenological data from photographs of biodiversity observation platforms Salomé-Díaz, Julieta Golubov, Jordan Díaz-Segura, Omar Ramírez-Gutiérrez, Ma. Cristina Sifuentes de la Torre, Sarah Koleff, Patricia Quintero, Esther Martínez, Armando Jesús PLoS One Research Article Phenology studies the time at which events in the life cycle of a species occur sand how they are related to environmental cues. Patterns of change in phenology at different scales can be used as an indicator of ecosystem changes and climate change, but the data necessary to detect these changes can be difficult to obtain due to their temporal and regional dimensions. Citizen science can contribute to generate large amounts of data on phenological changes at wide geographical scales that would be almost impossible for professional scientists to generate, but the quality and reliability of these data are often questioned. The objective of this study was to evaluate the use of a biodiversity observation citizen science platform based on photographic information as a potential source of large-scale phenological information, and to identify the key benefits and limitations of this type of information source. We used the Naturalista photographic databases for two invasive species in a tropical region: Leonotis nepetifolia and Nicotiana glauca. The photographs were classified into different phenophases (initial growth, immature flower, mature flower, dry fruit) by three groups of volunteers: a group of experts, a trained group with information on the biology and phenology of both species, and an untrained group. The degree of reliability of the phenological classifications was estimated for each group of volunteers and each phenophase. The degree of reliability of the phenological classification of the untrained group was generally very low for all phenophases. The group of trained volunteers showed accuracy levels for the reproductive phenophases that equaled the degree of reliability among the expert group, regardless of species, and was consistent across phenophases. We conclude that volunteer classification of photographic information contained in biodiversity observation platforms can provide phenological information with high geographic coverage and an increasing temporal coverage on general phenological patterns of species with wide distributions but has limited applicability in the identification of exact start and end dates. and peaks of the different phenophases. Public Library of Science 2023-03-07 /pmc/articles/PMC9990930/ /pubmed/36881607 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0282750 Text en © 2023 Salomé-Díaz et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Salomé-Díaz, Julieta
Golubov, Jordan
Díaz-Segura, Omar
Ramírez-Gutiérrez, Ma. Cristina
Sifuentes de la Torre, Sarah
Koleff, Patricia
Quintero, Esther
Martínez, Armando Jesús
Practice makes the expert: The importance of training volunteers in the generation of phenological data from photographs of biodiversity observation platforms
title Practice makes the expert: The importance of training volunteers in the generation of phenological data from photographs of biodiversity observation platforms
title_full Practice makes the expert: The importance of training volunteers in the generation of phenological data from photographs of biodiversity observation platforms
title_fullStr Practice makes the expert: The importance of training volunteers in the generation of phenological data from photographs of biodiversity observation platforms
title_full_unstemmed Practice makes the expert: The importance of training volunteers in the generation of phenological data from photographs of biodiversity observation platforms
title_short Practice makes the expert: The importance of training volunteers in the generation of phenological data from photographs of biodiversity observation platforms
title_sort practice makes the expert: the importance of training volunteers in the generation of phenological data from photographs of biodiversity observation platforms
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9990930/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36881607
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0282750
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