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An overview of the history, current contributions and future outlook of iNaturalist in Australia

Thomas Mesaglio, Corey T. Callaghan

2021Wildlife Research157 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Citizen science initiatives and the data they produce are increasingly common in ecology, conservation and biodiversity monitoring. Although the quality of citizen science data has historically been questioned, biases can be detected and corrected for, allowing these data to become comparable in quality to professionally collected data. Consequently, citizen science is increasingly being integrated with professional science, allowing the collection of data at unprecedented spatial and temporal scales. iNaturalist is one of the most popular biodiversity citizen science platforms globally, with more than 1.4 million users having contributed over 54 million observations. Australia is the top contributing nation in the southern hemisphere, and in the top four contributing nations globally, with over 1.6 million observations of over 36 000 identified species contributed by almost 27 000 users. Despite the platform’s success, there are few holistic syntheses of contributions to iNaturalist, especially for Australia. Here, we outline the history of iNaturalist from an Australian perspective, and summarise, taxonomically, temporally and spatially, Australian biodiversity data contributed to the platform. We conclude by discussing important future directions to maximise the usefulness of these data for ecological research, conservation and policy.

Topics & Concepts

Citizen scienceBiodiversityData qualityBiodiversity conservationEnvironmental resource managementPerspective (graphical)Conservation biologyData collectionEcologyQuality (philosophy)Science policyGeographyPolitical scienceSociologyBiologySocial scienceBusinessEnvironmental scienceComputer sciencePublic administrationMetric (unit)Artificial intelligencePhilosophyMarketingEpistemologyBotanySpecies Distribution and Climate ChangeGenomics and Phylogenetic StudiesPlant and animal studies
An overview of the history, current contributions and future outlook of iNaturalist in Australia | Litcius