Biodiversity Information Science and Standards :
Conference Abstract
|
Corresponding author: Mayuko Suwabe (mayuko.suwabe@oist.jp)
Received: 28 Sep 2024 | Published: 30 Sep 2024
© 2024 Mayuko Suwabe, Masako Ogasawara, Masashi Yoshimura, Kenneth Dudley, Toshihiro Kinjo, Cassondra George, Evan Economo
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Citation:
Suwabe M, Ogasawara M, Yoshimura M, Dudley KL, Kinjo T, George C, Economo EP (2024) OKEON: A Community-Collaborative Terrestrial Biodiversity Monitoring Network in Okinawa, Japan. Biodiversity Information Science and Standards 8: e138109. https://doi.org/10.3897/biss.8.138109
|
|
Datasets from natural history collections and biodiversity monitoring are a valuable source of information for assessing the impacts of global environmental problems such as climate change, habitat loss, and the spread of invasive species. The OKEON (OKinawa Environmental Observation Network) Churamori Project described here is a terrestrial monitoring network led by a university institution, Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology (OIST), which aims to investigate how these various global environmental problems affect local nature. The documentation of biodiversity has continued without pause from 2015 to the present, and includes insect specimens, automated wildlife images, soundscape data, and weather data at study sites covering a variety of land use categories, from subtropical forests to urban areas. Our emphasis in this project is on collaborative networks, which include not only the researcher network but also local networks (Fig.
The following are three categories of examples for how the project results may be used:
In recent years, the development of citizen science and data infrastructures such as the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) have contributed greatly to the accumulation of global biodiversity data, but at a more local scale, there are still large regional gaps in information. In areas where biodiversity information tends to be lacking, there is a possibility that monitoring can be started and/or continued on a stable basis if the results are relevant to local issues. The biggest challenge in long-term monitoring is how to continue. Even in OKEON, continuity is sometimes threatened due to changes in the organizational structure. In order to continue, it will be necessary to integrate various institutions to create a more robust network of collaboration, and to make the project both academically valuable and useful in solving local problems.
long term monitoring, environmental education, social implementation
Masako Ogasawara
SPNHC-TDWG 2024
This project was supported by JST COI-NEXT JPMJPF2205, MoE Environment Research and Technology Development Fund JPMEERF20234G01 and JSPS Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (B) 23K28275. We thank the agencies and researchers involved in this project, and the OKEON field team performing the field maintenance.