Citizen Science as an Ecological Research Tool: Challenges and Benefits
Cornell University · Cornell Lab of Ornithology
Abstract
Citizen science, the involvement of volunteers in research, has increased the scale of ecological field studies with continent-wide, centralized monitoring efforts and, more rarely, tapping of volunteers to conduct large, coordinated, field experiments. The unique benefit for the field of ecology lies in understanding processes occurring at broad geographic scales and on private lands, which are impossible to sample extensively with traditional field research models. Citizen science produces large, longitudinal data sets, whose potential for error and bias is poorly understood. Because it does not usually aim to uncover mechanisms underlying ecological patterns, citizen science is best viewed as complementary…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 52.33
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 134
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Citizen science
- Field (mathematics)
- Ecology
- Scale (ratio)
- Data science
- Abundance (ecology)
- Process (computing)
- Environmental resource management
- Climate action