Journal ArticleOpen Access
Increasing biodiversity knowledge through social media: A case study from tropical Bangladesh
Authors
Author Affiliations
Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research, The University of Queensland, German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research, Friedrich Schiller University Jena, ...
Published InBioScience
Year2023
Citations35
Abstract
Citizen science programs are becoming increasingly popular among naturalists but remain heavily biased taxonomically and geographically. However, with the explosive popularity of social media and the near-ubiquitous availability of smartphones, many post wildlife photographs on social media. Here, we illustrate the potential of harvesting these data to enhance our biodiversity understanding using Bangladesh, a tropical biodiverse country, as a case study. We compared biodiversity records extracted from Facebook with those from the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF), collating geospatial records for 1013 unique species, including 970 species from Facebook and 712 species from GBIF. Although most observation records were biased toward major cities, the Facebook records were more evenly spatially distributed. About 86% of the Threatened species records were from…
View at Publisher
BORR does not host full-text PDFs. The button above takes you to the original publisher.