Abstract Background Citizen Science (CS) as a term implies a great deal of approaches and scopes involving many different fields of science. The number of the relevant projects globally has been increased significantly in the recent years. Large scale ecological questions can be answered only through extended observation networks and CS projects can support this effort. Although the need of such projects is apparent, an important part of scientific community cast doubt on the reliability of CS data sets. New information The pilot CS project COMBER has been created in order to provide evidence to answer the aforementioned question in the coastal marine biodiversity monitoring. The results of the current analysis show that a carefully designed CS project with clear hypotheses, wide participation and data sets validation, can be a valuable tool for the large scale and long term changes in marine biodiversity pattern change and therefore for relevant management and conservation issues.
Testing the robustness of Citizen Science projects: Evaluating the results of pilot project COMBER
G. Chatzigeorgiou,S. Faulwetter,T. Dailianis,V. Smith,Panagiota Koulouri,C. Dounas,C. Arvanitidis
Published 2016 in Biodiversity Data Journal
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- Publication year
2016
- Venue
Biodiversity Data Journal
- Publication date
2016-12-21
- Fields of study
Medicine, Computer Science, Environmental Science
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- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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