Citizen science and online data: opportunities and challenges for snake ecology and action against snakebite
Autor
Afiliação Butantan
Afiliação externa
Florida Gulf Coast University ; University of Geneva ; (WHO-SW) World Health Organization Switzerland ; University of Bern ; (EPFL) École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne ; The Reptile Database ; (VCU) Virginia Commonwealth University ; Suranaree University of Technology ; RJ Gray Ecology ; HerpMapper ; Indian Snakes ; (USP) Universidade de São Paulo ; University of Kisangani ; Fauna & Flora International ; (GWC) Global Wildlife Conservation ; (FURG) Universidade Federal do Rio Grande ; Estação Ecológica de Murici ; (WITS) University of the Witwatersrand ; Bangor University ; Anhui Normal University ; Rutgers University ; Madras Crocodile Bank Trust ; Toho University ; EcoHealth Alliance ; Tribhuvan University ; (NAU) Northern Arizona University ; Global Biology Switzerland ; (IDECC) Institute for Development, Ecology, Conservation and Cooperation ; Museum für Naturkunde ; Museum d'Histoire naturelle Geneve ; University of North Georgia ; Friends of Snakes Society ; University of Zurich
Tipo de documento
Article
Idioma
English
Direitos de acesso
Open access
Licença de uso
CC BY
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Métricas
Resumo em inglês
The secretive behavior and life history of snakes makes studying their biology, distribution, and the epidemiology of venomous snakebite challenging. One of the most useful, most versatile, and easiest to collect types of biological data are photographs, particularly those that are connected with geographic location and date-time metadata. Photos verify occurrence records, provide data on phenotypes and ecology, and are often used to illustrate new species descriptions, field guides and identification keys, as well as in training humans and computer vision algorithms to identify snakes. We scoured eleven online and two offline sources of snake photos in an attempt to collect as many photos of as many snake species as possible, and attempt to explain some of the inter-species variation in photograph quantity among global regions and taxonomic groups, and with regard to medical importance, human population density, and range size. We collected a total of 725,565 photos—between 1 and 48,696 photos of 3098 of the world's 3879 snake species (79.9%), leaving 781 “most wanted” species with no photos (20.1% of all currently-described species as of the December 2020 release of The Reptile Database). We provide a list of most wanted species sortable by family, continent, authority, and medical importance, and encourage snake photographers worldwide to submit photos and associated metadata, particularly of “missing” species, to the most permanent and useful online archives: The Reptile Database, iNaturalist, and HerpMapper.
Referência
Durso AM., Castañeda RR, Montalcini C, Mondardini M.R, Fernandez-Marques JL., Grey F, et al. Citizen science and online data: opportunities and challenges for snake ecology and action against snakebite. Toxicon X. 2021 July;9-10:100071. doi:10.1016/j.toxcx.2021.100071.
URL permanente para citação desta referência
https://repositorio.butantan.gov.br/handle/butantan/3902
URL
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.toxcx.2021.100071
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Agência de fomento
Data de publicação
2021
Arquivos neste item
Este item está licenciada sob uma Licença Creative Commons