Harnessing the Power of Community Science to Address Data Gaps in Arctic Observing: Invasive Species in Alaska as Case Examples

IF 0.9 4区 地球科学 Q4 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES Arctic Pub Date : 2021-10-28 DOI:10.14430/arctic73773
T. Schwoerer, K. Spellman, T. Davis, O. Lee, Aaron Martin, C. Mulder, Nicole Y. Swenson, Audrey Taylor, Genelle Winter
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

The Arctic is undergoing large-scale changes that are likely to accelerate in future decades such as introductions and expansions of invasive species. The Arctic is in a unique position to prevent new introductions and spread of existing invasive species by adopting policies and actions aimed at early detection. Responding to threats from invasive species to minimize impacts to ecosystems, communities, food security, and northern economies will necessitate extensive observations and monitoring, but resource managers often face decisions without having adequate data and resources at hand. Local observing programs such as citizen science and community-based monitoring programs present attractive methods for increasing observing capacity that span contributory and co-created approaches while raising awareness of an issue among stakeholders. While the co-created model has been widely applied and encouraged in the Arctic context, contributory citizen science programs offer an additional tool for addressing observing needs in the Arctic. We showcase three contributory citizen science programs related to freshwater, terrestrial, and marine environments that have supported the objectives of the Alaska Invasive Species Partnership. We discuss criteria for achieving ARIAS priority actions at the participant scale related to participants’ motivation and participants’ understanding of the value of their contributions, at the programmatic scale, for example promoting accessible, reciprocal, and transparent knowledge exchange, and at the policy and science scale where management action is data driven. The approach is aimed at successful integration of citizen science into Arctic policy making. Finally, we discuss challenges related to broader global data collection and future directions for contributory citizen science within Arctic observing networks.
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利用社区科学的力量解决北极观测中的数据缺口:以阿拉斯加的入侵物种为例
北极正在经历大规模的变化,这种变化在未来几十年可能会加速,比如入侵物种的引入和扩张。通过采取旨在早期发现的政策和行动,北极在防止现有入侵物种的新引入和传播方面处于独特地位。应对入侵物种的威胁,以尽量减少对生态系统、社区、粮食安全和北方经济的影响,将需要广泛的观察和监测,但资源管理者往往在没有足够数据和资源的情况下面临决策。公民科学和基于社区的监测项目等地方观测项目为提高观测能力提供了有吸引力的方法,这些方法跨越了贡献和共同创造的方法,同时提高了利益相关者对问题的认识。虽然共同创建的模型在北极环境中得到了广泛的应用和鼓励,但贡献公民科学计划为解决北极观测需求提供了额外的工具。我们展示了与淡水、陆地和海洋环境相关的三个有贡献的公民科学项目,这些项目支持了阿拉斯加入侵物种伙伴关系的目标。我们讨论了在参与者尺度上实现ARIAS优先行动的标准,涉及参与者的动机和参与者对其贡献价值的理解,在规划尺度上,例如促进可访问、互惠和透明的知识交流,以及在政策和科学尺度上,管理行动是数据驱动的。该方法旨在将公民科学成功地整合到北极政策制定中。最后,我们讨论了与更广泛的全球数据收集相关的挑战,以及北极观测网络中贡献公民科学的未来方向。
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来源期刊
Arctic
Arctic 地学-环境科学
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
51
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Arctic is a peer-reviewed, primary research journal that publishes the results of scientific research from all areas of Arctic scholarship. Original scholarly papers in the physical, social, and biological sciences, humanities, engineering, and technology are included, as are book reviews, commentaries, letters to the editor, and profiles of significant people, places, or events of northern interest
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