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Opinions of citizen scientists on open access to UK butterfly and moth occurrence data

Fox, Richard, Bourn, Nigel A. D., Dennis, Emily B., Heafield, Richard T., Maclean, Ilya M. D., Wilson, Robert J. (2019) Opinions of citizen scientists on open access to UK butterfly and moth occurrence data. Biodiversity and Conservation, 28 (12). pp. 3321-3341. ISSN 0960-3115. (doi:10.1007/s10531-019-01824-6​) (KAR id:77429)

Abstract

Citizen science plays an increasingly important role in biodiversity research and conservation, enabling large volumes of data to be gathered across extensive spatial scales in a cost-effective manner. Open access increases the utility of such data, informing land-use decisions that may affect species persistence, enhancing transparency and encouraging proliferation of research applications. However, open access provision of recent, fine-scale spatial information on the locations of species may also prompt legitimate concerns among contributors regarding possible unintended negative conservation impacts, violations of privacy and commercial exploitation of volunteer-gathered data. Here we canvas the attitudes towards open access of contributors (104 regional co-ordinators and 510 recorders) of species occurrence records to two of the largest citizen science biodiversity recording schemes, the UK’s Butterflies for the New Millennium project and National Moth Recording Scheme. We find that while the majority of participants expressed support for open access in principle, most were more cautious in practice, preferring to limit the spatial resolution of records, particularly of threatened species, and restrict commercial reuse of data. In addition, citizen scientists’ opinions differed between UK countries, taxonomic groups and the level of involvement volunteers had in the schemes. In order to maintain successful and democratic citizen science schemes, organisers, funders and data users must understand and respect participants’ expectations and aspirations regarding open data while seeking to optimise data use for scientific and societal benefits.

Item Type: Article
DOI/Identification number: 10.1007/s10531-019-01824-6​
Uncontrolled keywords: Open data, Citizen science, Volunteer attitudes, Species occurrence, Biodiversity conservation, Lepidoptera
Divisions: Divisions > Division of Computing, Engineering and Mathematical Sciences > School of Mathematics, Statistics and Actuarial Science
Depositing User: Emily Dennis
Date Deposited: 14 Oct 2019 14:35 UTC
Last Modified: 16 Feb 2021 14:08 UTC
Resource URI: https://kar.kent.ac.uk/id/eprint/77429 (The current URI for this page, for reference purposes)

University of Kent Author Information

Dennis, Emily B..

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