The Big Seaweed Search: Evaluating a citizen science project for a difficult to identify group of organisms

The Big Seaweed Search invites people to survey UK seashores for 14 conspicuous seaweeds. The science investigates: (i) impact of sea temperature rise; (ii) spread of non-native species; and (iii) impact of ocean acidification. Survey data submitted between June 2016 and May 2020 were analysed to ev...

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Main Authors: Brodie, Juliet, Kunzig, Sarah, Agate, Jules, Yesson, Chris, Robinson, Lucy
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10161271/
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftucl:oai:eprints.ucl.ac.uk.OAI2:10161271 2023-12-24T10:23:51+01:00 The Big Seaweed Search: Evaluating a citizen science project for a difficult to identify group of organisms Brodie, Juliet Kunzig, Sarah Agate, Jules Yesson, Chris Robinson, Lucy 2022-11-27 https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10161271/ eng eng Wiley https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10161271/ Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems (2022) (In press). citizen science conservation coralline algae data verification large brown seaweeds non-native species ocean acidification Article 2022 ftucl 2023-11-27T13:07:35Z The Big Seaweed Search invites people to survey UK seashores for 14 conspicuous seaweeds. The science investigates: (i) impact of sea temperature rise; (ii) spread of non-native species; and (iii) impact of ocean acidification. Survey data submitted between June 2016 and May 2020 were analysed to evaluate and explore project directions in relation to citizen science project development. Of the 378 surveys submitted, 1,414 people participated, contributing 1,531 person hours. Surveys were undertaken around the UK, with the highest proportion (46.7%) in the south west and the lowest (3.7%) in the north east. After data verification, 1,007 (54%) records were accepted. Fucus serratus had the highest number of entries correctly identified (66%) and Undaria pinnatifida the lowest (5%), inferring that at least some seaweeds can be difficult to identify, although the overall misidentification rate was relatively low (c. 15%). Apart from Alaria esculenta, U. pinnatifida and Saccharina latissima, the large brown seaweeds were abundant on at least some shores. Non-natives Sargassum muticum and Asparagopsis armata, were band-forming but in low numbers. Coralline algae, whilst band-forming on some shores, were most commonly patchy or sparse in abundance. Revisits, i.e. repeat surveys, at the same site with an interval of at least 1 year, are relatively low, with 18 sites revisited once and three sites revisited twice. Currently, data are insufficient to determine whether any changes in abundance could be detected. This study highlights areas where project developments can enhance data quality and quantity, e.g. better identification resources, training programmes for dedicated volunteers, and an annual focus week of activities. The project framed around climate change impacts, aims to raise awareness of the ecological importance of, and threats faced by, this understudied habitat and introduce conservation concepts including the need to protect common species showing signs of decline. Article in Journal/Newspaper Ocean acidification University College London: UCL Discovery
institution Open Polar
collection University College London: UCL Discovery
op_collection_id ftucl
language English
topic citizen science
conservation
coralline algae
data verification
large brown seaweeds
non-native species
ocean acidification
spellingShingle citizen science
conservation
coralline algae
data verification
large brown seaweeds
non-native species
ocean acidification
Brodie, Juliet
Kunzig, Sarah
Agate, Jules
Yesson, Chris
Robinson, Lucy
The Big Seaweed Search: Evaluating a citizen science project for a difficult to identify group of organisms
topic_facet citizen science
conservation
coralline algae
data verification
large brown seaweeds
non-native species
ocean acidification
description The Big Seaweed Search invites people to survey UK seashores for 14 conspicuous seaweeds. The science investigates: (i) impact of sea temperature rise; (ii) spread of non-native species; and (iii) impact of ocean acidification. Survey data submitted between June 2016 and May 2020 were analysed to evaluate and explore project directions in relation to citizen science project development. Of the 378 surveys submitted, 1,414 people participated, contributing 1,531 person hours. Surveys were undertaken around the UK, with the highest proportion (46.7%) in the south west and the lowest (3.7%) in the north east. After data verification, 1,007 (54%) records were accepted. Fucus serratus had the highest number of entries correctly identified (66%) and Undaria pinnatifida the lowest (5%), inferring that at least some seaweeds can be difficult to identify, although the overall misidentification rate was relatively low (c. 15%). Apart from Alaria esculenta, U. pinnatifida and Saccharina latissima, the large brown seaweeds were abundant on at least some shores. Non-natives Sargassum muticum and Asparagopsis armata, were band-forming but in low numbers. Coralline algae, whilst band-forming on some shores, were most commonly patchy or sparse in abundance. Revisits, i.e. repeat surveys, at the same site with an interval of at least 1 year, are relatively low, with 18 sites revisited once and three sites revisited twice. Currently, data are insufficient to determine whether any changes in abundance could be detected. This study highlights areas where project developments can enhance data quality and quantity, e.g. better identification resources, training programmes for dedicated volunteers, and an annual focus week of activities. The project framed around climate change impacts, aims to raise awareness of the ecological importance of, and threats faced by, this understudied habitat and introduce conservation concepts including the need to protect common species showing signs of decline.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Brodie, Juliet
Kunzig, Sarah
Agate, Jules
Yesson, Chris
Robinson, Lucy
author_facet Brodie, Juliet
Kunzig, Sarah
Agate, Jules
Yesson, Chris
Robinson, Lucy
author_sort Brodie, Juliet
title The Big Seaweed Search: Evaluating a citizen science project for a difficult to identify group of organisms
title_short The Big Seaweed Search: Evaluating a citizen science project for a difficult to identify group of organisms
title_full The Big Seaweed Search: Evaluating a citizen science project for a difficult to identify group of organisms
title_fullStr The Big Seaweed Search: Evaluating a citizen science project for a difficult to identify group of organisms
title_full_unstemmed The Big Seaweed Search: Evaluating a citizen science project for a difficult to identify group of organisms
title_sort big seaweed search: evaluating a citizen science project for a difficult to identify group of organisms
publisher Wiley
publishDate 2022
url https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10161271/
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_source Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems (2022) (In press).
op_relation https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10161271/
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