Conservation and the botanist effect

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Conservation and the botanist effect. / Ahrends, Antje; Rahbek, Carsten; Bulling, Mark T.; Burgess, Neil David; Platts, Philip J.; Lovett, Jon C.; Kindemba, Victoria Wilkins; Owen, Nisha; Sallu, Albert Ntemi; Marshall, Andrew R.; Mhoro, Boniface E.; Fanning, Eibleis; Marchant, Rob.

In: Biological Conservation, Vol. 144, No. 1, 2011, p. 131-140.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Ahrends, A, Rahbek, C, Bulling, MT, Burgess, ND, Platts, PJ, Lovett, JC, Kindemba, VW, Owen, N, Sallu, AN, Marshall, AR, Mhoro, BE, Fanning, E & Marchant, R 2011, 'Conservation and the botanist effect', Biological Conservation, vol. 144, no. 1, pp. 131-140. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2010.08.008

APA

Ahrends, A., Rahbek, C., Bulling, M. T., Burgess, N. D., Platts, P. J., Lovett, J. C., Kindemba, V. W., Owen, N., Sallu, A. N., Marshall, A. R., Mhoro, B. E., Fanning, E., & Marchant, R. (2011). Conservation and the botanist effect. Biological Conservation, 144(1), 131-140. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2010.08.008

Vancouver

Ahrends A, Rahbek C, Bulling MT, Burgess ND, Platts PJ, Lovett JC et al. Conservation and the botanist effect. Biological Conservation. 2011;144(1):131-140. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2010.08.008

Author

Ahrends, Antje ; Rahbek, Carsten ; Bulling, Mark T. ; Burgess, Neil David ; Platts, Philip J. ; Lovett, Jon C. ; Kindemba, Victoria Wilkins ; Owen, Nisha ; Sallu, Albert Ntemi ; Marshall, Andrew R. ; Mhoro, Boniface E. ; Fanning, Eibleis ; Marchant, Rob. / Conservation and the botanist effect. In: Biological Conservation. 2011 ; Vol. 144, No. 1. pp. 131-140.

Bibtex

@article{a7f724006b00409282ddb5184f16b115,
title = "Conservation and the botanist effect",
abstract = "Over the last few decades, resources for descriptive taxonomy and biodiversity inventories have substantially declined, and they are also globally unequally distributed. This could result in an overall decline in the quality of biodiversity data as well as geographic biases, reducing the utility and reliability of inventories. We tested this hypothesis with tropical tree records (n = 24,024) collected from the Eastern Arc Mountains, Tanzania, between 1980 and 2007 by 13 botanists, whose collections represent 80% of the total plant records for this region. Our results show that botanists with practical training in tropical plant identification record both more species and more species of conservation concern (20 more species, two more endemic and one more threatened species per 250 specimens) than untrained botanists. Training and the number of person-days in the field explained 96% of the variation in the numbers of species found, and training was the most important predictor for explaining recorded numbers of threatened and endemic species. Data quality was related to available facilities, with good herbarium access significantly reducing the proportions of misidentifications and misspellings. Our analysis suggests that it may be necessary to account for recorder training when comparing diversity across sites, particularly when assessing numbers of rare and endemic species, and for global data portals to provide such information. We also suggest that greater investment in the training of botanists and in the provisioning of good facilities would substantially increase recording efficiency and data reliability, thereby improving conservation planning and implementation on the ground. ",
author = "Antje Ahrends and Carsten Rahbek and Bulling, {Mark T.} and Burgess, {Neil David} and Platts, {Philip J.} and Lovett, {Jon C.} and Kindemba, {Victoria Wilkins} and Nisha Owen and Sallu, {Albert Ntemi} and Marshall, {Andrew R.} and Mhoro, {Boniface E.} and Eibleis Fanning and Rob Marchant",
year = "2011",
doi = "10.1016/j.biocon.2010.08.008",
language = "English",
volume = "144",
pages = "131--140",
journal = "Biological Conservation",
issn = "0006-3207",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Conservation and the botanist effect

AU - Ahrends, Antje

AU - Rahbek, Carsten

AU - Bulling, Mark T.

AU - Burgess, Neil David

AU - Platts, Philip J.

AU - Lovett, Jon C.

AU - Kindemba, Victoria Wilkins

AU - Owen, Nisha

AU - Sallu, Albert Ntemi

AU - Marshall, Andrew R.

AU - Mhoro, Boniface E.

AU - Fanning, Eibleis

AU - Marchant, Rob

PY - 2011

Y1 - 2011

N2 - Over the last few decades, resources for descriptive taxonomy and biodiversity inventories have substantially declined, and they are also globally unequally distributed. This could result in an overall decline in the quality of biodiversity data as well as geographic biases, reducing the utility and reliability of inventories. We tested this hypothesis with tropical tree records (n = 24,024) collected from the Eastern Arc Mountains, Tanzania, between 1980 and 2007 by 13 botanists, whose collections represent 80% of the total plant records for this region. Our results show that botanists with practical training in tropical plant identification record both more species and more species of conservation concern (20 more species, two more endemic and one more threatened species per 250 specimens) than untrained botanists. Training and the number of person-days in the field explained 96% of the variation in the numbers of species found, and training was the most important predictor for explaining recorded numbers of threatened and endemic species. Data quality was related to available facilities, with good herbarium access significantly reducing the proportions of misidentifications and misspellings. Our analysis suggests that it may be necessary to account for recorder training when comparing diversity across sites, particularly when assessing numbers of rare and endemic species, and for global data portals to provide such information. We also suggest that greater investment in the training of botanists and in the provisioning of good facilities would substantially increase recording efficiency and data reliability, thereby improving conservation planning and implementation on the ground.

AB - Over the last few decades, resources for descriptive taxonomy and biodiversity inventories have substantially declined, and they are also globally unequally distributed. This could result in an overall decline in the quality of biodiversity data as well as geographic biases, reducing the utility and reliability of inventories. We tested this hypothesis with tropical tree records (n = 24,024) collected from the Eastern Arc Mountains, Tanzania, between 1980 and 2007 by 13 botanists, whose collections represent 80% of the total plant records for this region. Our results show that botanists with practical training in tropical plant identification record both more species and more species of conservation concern (20 more species, two more endemic and one more threatened species per 250 specimens) than untrained botanists. Training and the number of person-days in the field explained 96% of the variation in the numbers of species found, and training was the most important predictor for explaining recorded numbers of threatened and endemic species. Data quality was related to available facilities, with good herbarium access significantly reducing the proportions of misidentifications and misspellings. Our analysis suggests that it may be necessary to account for recorder training when comparing diversity across sites, particularly when assessing numbers of rare and endemic species, and for global data portals to provide such information. We also suggest that greater investment in the training of botanists and in the provisioning of good facilities would substantially increase recording efficiency and data reliability, thereby improving conservation planning and implementation on the ground.

U2 - 10.1016/j.biocon.2010.08.008

DO - 10.1016/j.biocon.2010.08.008

M3 - Journal article

VL - 144

SP - 131

EP - 140

JO - Biological Conservation

JF - Biological Conservation

SN - 0006-3207

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 40323329