Large-scale mammal monitoring: The potential of a citizen science camera-trapping project in the United Kingdom

MammalWeb Citizen Scientists

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

14 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

In light of global biodiversity loss, there is an increasing need for large-scale wildlife monitoring. This is difficult for mammals, since they can be elusive and nocturnal. In the United Kingdom, there is a lack of systematic, widespread mammal monitoring, and a recognized deficiency of data. Innovative new approaches are required. We developed MammalWeb, a portal to enable UK-wide camera trapping by a network of citizen scientists and partner organizations. MammalWeb citizen scientists contribute to both the collection and classification of camera trap data. Following trials in 2013–2017, MammalWeb has grown organically to increase its geographic reach (e.g. ∼2000 sites in Britain). It has so far provided the equivalent of over 340 camera trap-years of wild mammal monitoring, and produced nearly 440,000 classified image sequences and videos, of which, over 180,000 are mammal detections. We describe MammalWeb, its background, its development and the novel approaches we have for participation. We consider the data collected by MammalWeb participants, especially in light of their relevance to the main goals of wildlife monitoring: to provide spatial data, abundance data and temporal behavioural data. MammalWeb can complement existing approaches to mammal monitoring. Explicit accounting for spatial and temporal patterns in animal activity enables accounting of bias relative to ad hoc observational data. Estimating abundance presents challenges, as for many camera-trapping studies, but we discuss the potential of the data as they stand, and opportunities to advance their value for abundance estimation. Challenges remain to MammalWeb's central missions of enhancing engagement with and connection to nature, and delivering policy-relevant data on Britain's wild mammals. We discuss these challenges and the opportunities they provide for advances in respect of engagement, science and financial security. Our approach reduces administrative burden and increases spatial coverage and, as such, MammalWeb provides a useful addition to existing case studies of citizen science camera-trapping program design. We believe MammalWeb is an important step towards fulfilling calls for UK-wide mammal monitoring and our description of challenges identifies an agenda for fulfilling that purpose.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere12180
Number of pages15
JournalEcological Solutions and Evidence
Volume3
Issue number4
Early online date11 Oct 2022
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 11 Oct 2022
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

© 2022 The Authors. Ecological Solutions and Evidence published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Ecological Society.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative
Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/),
which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium,
provided the original work is properly cited.

Funding

HMP & YOI Deerbolt. Grant Number: Operational Innovation Award Durham University. Grant Numbers: 030-15/16, Doctoral Scholarship, TESS - ESLE2012 Economic and Social Research Council. Grant Number: Impact Acceleration Account British Ecological Society European Food Safety Authority. Grant Numbers: OC/EFSA/ALPHA/2016/01-01, OC/EFSA/AMU/2018/02 Royal Society. Grant Number: PG∖S2∖192047 National Lottery Heritage Fund. Grant Numbers: OH-14-06474, OM-21-00458, RH-16-09501 Natural Environment Research Council. Grant Numbers: NE/L002590/1, NE/R008485/1

FundersFunder number
HM Prison Deerbolt
University of Durham030-15/16, TESS - ESLE2012
European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) OC/EFSA/ALPHA/2016/01-01, OC/EFSA/AMU/2018/02
The Royal SocietyPG∖S2∖192047
The National Lottery Heritage FundOH-14-06474, OM-21-00458, RH-16-09501
Natural Environment Research CouncilNE/L002590/1, NE/R008485/1

    Keywords

    • biodiversity
    • camera traps
    • citizen science
    • conservation biology
    • engagement
    • mammal monitoring
    • population ecology

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Global and Planetary Change
    • Ecology
    • Nature and Landscape Conservation
    • Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law

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