On using iNaturalist data to estimate trends

Autores/as

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17161/bi.v20i1.24266

Resumen

A discussion is presented of the use of citizen science data to study trends in population 14 abundance and on numbers of species. The discussion is framed around two widely accepted 15 models of indices of biological signal per unit of effort. When the trend is number of species per 16 unit of effort, the model is the Michaelis-Menten equation, that has an asymptote. When the 17 trend is in abundance per unit effort, the model is the simple linear “catch/effort” model of 18 fisheries. It is found that diversity per unit of effort has an artifactual tendency to negative trends, 19 while abundance per unit effort is less likely to be influenced by artifacts of the metrics. The 20 results strongly suggest that, at least for trends in species numbers, the use of citizen science data 21 is unadvisable when the sampling effort is increasing.

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Publicado

2026-02-25

Número

Sección

Articles (peer-reviewed)

Cómo citar

Soberón, Jorge, and Andrés Christén. 2026. “On Using INaturalist Data to Estimate Trends”. Biodiversity Informatics 20 (1). https://doi.org/10.17161/bi.v20i1.24266.