Strengths and Challenges of Using iNaturalist in Plant Research with Focus on Data Quality
暂无分享,去创建一个
N. Nualart | N. Ibáñez | M. Mairal | C. Gómez-Bellver | Jordi López-Pujol | Eduard López-Guillén | Ileana Herrera | Badis Bensid | Pedro Jiménez-Mejías | Laura Mena-García | Mònica Utjés-Mascó
[1] F. Krell,et al. The Silent Extinction of Species and Taxonomists—An Appeal to Science Policymakers and Legislators , 2023, Diversity.
[2] L. O. Alvarado-Cárdenas,et al. A new tropical species of Aphyllon (Orobanchaceae: Orobancheae) from Chiapas, Mexico , 2023, Botanical Sciences.
[3] R. Barrett,et al. Bush Blitz collections and iNaturalist observations assist the recognition of a new species from New South Wales, Lomandra briggsiana (Asparagaceae) , 2023, Telopea.
[4] A. Plata-Torres,et al. A flower in paradise: citizen science helps to discover Thismia paradisiaca (Thismiaceae), a new species from the Chocó Biogeographic region in Colombia , 2023, Phytotaxa.
[5] Well-intentioned initiatives hinder understanding biodiversity conservation: Cloaked iNaturalist information for threatened species , 2023, Biological Conservation.
[6] E. L. Guerrero. Distribución geográfica histórica y actual y estado de conservación del lupino pampeano Lupinus aureonitens (Fabaceae) , 2023, Boletín de la Sociedad Argentina de Botánica.
[7] E. Wenk,et al. Photographs as an essential biodiversity resource: drivers of gaps in the vascular plant photographic record. , 2023, The New phytologist.
[8] G. Odonne,et al. To Pick or Not to Pick: Photographic Voucher Specimens as an Alternative Method to Botanical Collecting in Ethnobotany , 2023, Journal of Ethnobiology.
[9] J. Resasco,et al. Does adding community science observations to museum records improve distribution modeling of a rare endemic plant? , 2023, Ecosphere.
[10] N. Jacobsen,et al. Cryptocoryne esquerionii (Araceae), a remarkable new species discovered by a citizen scientist in Zamboanga Peninsula, southwestern Philippines , 2023, Nordic Journal of Botany.
[11] F. Pando,et al. Seven Hundred Projects in iNaturalist Spain: Performance and Lessons Learned , 2022, Sustainability.
[12] J. López‐Pujol,et al. The Genus Kalanchoe (Crassulaceae) in Ecuador: From Gardens to the Wild , 2022, Plants.
[13] D. Cavallari,et al. iNaturalist as a tool in the study of tropical molluscs , 2022, PloS one.
[14] K. Feeley,et al. Rediscovery of Gasteranthusextinctus L.E.Skog & L.P.Kvist (Gesneriaceae) at multiple sites in western Ecuador , 2022, PhytoKeys.
[15] Jessica L. Allen,et al. An assessment of data accuracy and best practice recommendations for observations of lichens and other taxonomically difficult taxa on iNaturalist , 2022, Botany.
[16] J. Frigerio,et al. BambApp: a citizen science project for the re-evaluation of the invasive potential of bamboo species in North-West Italy , 2021, Acta Horticulturae.
[17] Amanda K. Neill,et al. Noccaea perfoliata or Microthlaspi perfoliatum (Brassicaceae), new to the flora of Texas, U.S.A. , 2021, Journal of the Botanical Research Institute of Texas.
[18] M. Chytrý,et al. Plant hunting: exploring the behaviour of amateur botanists in the field , 2021, Biodiversity and Conservation.
[19] E. Arévalo‐Gardini,et al. Climate change impact on cultivated and wild cacao in Peru and the search of climate change‐tolerant genotypes , 2021, Diversity and Distributions.
[20] Daniel Koenig,et al. Genetic and morphological differentiation in Washingtonia (Arecaceae): solving a century-old palm mystery , 2021, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society.
[21] H. Ballard,et al. Exploring the participation of young citizen scientists in scientific research: The case of iNaturalist , 2021, PloS one.
[22] E. González,et al. Learning Plant Biodiversity in Nature: The Use of the Citizen–Science Platform iNaturalist as a Collaborative Tool in Secondary Education , 2021, Sustainability.
[23] L. O. Alvarado-Cárdenas,et al. Gonolobus naturalistae (Apocynaceae; Asclepiadoideae; Gonolobeae; Gonolobinae), a New Species From México , 2020 .
[24] J. Crisci,et al. The End of Botany. , 2020, Trends in plant science.
[25] Mark A. Rollins,et al. iNaturalist as an engaging tool for identifying organisms in outdoor activities , 2020, Journal of Biological Education.
[26] J. López‐Pujol,et al. How photographs can be a complement of herbarium vouchers: A proposal of standardization , 2019 .
[27] J. M. Heberling,et al. iNaturalist as a tool to expand the research value of museum specimens , 2018, Applications in plant sciences.
[28] E. Focht,et al. A Hollywood palm icon unmasked: clinal variation in Washingtonia (Arecaceae) of Peninsular California , 2018, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society.
[29] A. Klimova,et al. Genotyping by sequencing reveals contrasting patterns of population structure, ecologically mediated divergence, and long‐distance dispersal in North American palms , 2018, Ecology and evolution.
[30] W. John Kress,et al. Citizen Science and Climate Change: Mapping the Range Expansions of Native and Exotic Plants with the Mobile App Leafsnap , 2018 .
[31] S. Livesley,et al. A global comparison of the climatic niches of urban and native tree populations , 2018 .
[32] Matthew V. Talluto,et al. The changing role of ornamental horticulture in alien plant invasions , 2018, Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society.
[33] Helen E Roy,et al. The diversity and evolution of ecological and environmental citizen science , 2017, PloS one.
[34] T. Engstrom,et al. The conservation paradox of endangered and invasive species , 2016, Conservation biology : the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology.
[35] N. Lorusso,et al. Personal BioBlitz: A New Way to Encourage Biodiversity Discovery and Knowledge in K–99 Education and Outreach , 2015 .
[36] Michael J. O. Pocock,et al. Ecological monitoring with citizen science: the design and implementation of schemes for recording plants in Britain and Ireland , 2015 .
[37] S. Pimm,et al. Species, extinct before we know them? , 2015, Current Biology.
[38] B. Hugueny,et al. Estimating How Many Undescribed Species Have Gone Extinct , 2014, Conservation biology : the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology.
[39] Mikolaj Morzy. ICT Services for open and citizen science , 2014, World Wide Web.
[40] Arturo H. Ariño,et al. Assessing the Primary Data Hosted by the Spanish Node of the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) , 2013, PloS one.
[41] M. Goodchild,et al. Crowdsourcing Geographic Knowledge: Volunteered Geographic Information (VGI) in Theory and Practice , 2012 .
[42] Rick Bonney,et al. The history of public participation in ecological research , 2012 .
[43] F. Boero. Faculty Opinions recommendation of New species in the Old World: Europe as a frontier in biodiversity exploration, a test bed for 21st century taxonomy. , 2012 .
[44] Mark P. Simmons,et al. Miocene dispersal drives island radiations in the palm tribe Trachycarpeae (Arecaceae). , 2012, Systematic biology.
[45] David N. Bonter,et al. Citizen Science as an Ecological Research Tool: Challenges and Benefits , 2010 .
[46] J. Silvertown. A new dawn for citizen science. , 2009, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[47] Mark Williamson,et al. Alien plants in checklists and floras: towards better communication between taxonomists and ecologists , 2004 .
[48] P. Farber. The development of ornithological collections in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries and their relationship to the emergence of ornithology as a scientific discipline , 1980 .
[49] Ryo Sakurai,et al. Citizen science: a new approach to advance ecology, education, and conservation , 2015, Ecological Research.