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14 March 2025 A simplified method to detect and monitor alien plant species with invasive potential through citizen science: an application from the European Union–funded LIFE medCLIFFS project volunteers' data
Carlos Santana, Arnau Bosch-Guiu, Carlos Gómez-Bellver, Jordi López-Pujol, Neus Nualart
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Abstract

Citizen science is becoming very useful in surveying and monitoring biodiversity. Within the European Union LIFE medCLIFFS project, a network of volunteers has been established for the detection and long-term monitoring of invasive plant species that threaten the endemic flora of Mediterranean cliffs in northeastern Spain. Through iNaturalist, volunteers record various data along a series of 1-km transects. Based on the ca. 700 observations collected by volunteers in 2023 (the first year of the project), a simple and visually attractive methodology for assessing the recorded populations has been developed. This method classifies populations into one of three population dynamics categories: (1) propagative behavior (i.e., populations with seedlings or young plants but lacking senescent or dead individuals); (2) senescent behavior (i.e., showing senescent/dead plants but lacking seedlings/juveniles); and (3) a mixed behavior (i.e., containing both). This methodology, whose outputs are easily interpretable as heat maps, allows the collection of large datasets on invasive plants by citizen scientists, with two main purposes: (1) knowing which species are most concerning based on simple, straightforward observations of their population dynamics; and (2) identifying which regions of the study area are more problematic and where management efforts should therefore be directed.

Carlos Santana, Arnau Bosch-Guiu, Carlos Gómez-Bellver, Jordi López-Pujol, and Neus Nualart "A simplified method to detect and monitor alien plant species with invasive potential through citizen science: an application from the European Union–funded LIFE medCLIFFS project volunteers' data," Invasive Plant Science and Management 18(4), 1-11, (14 March 2025). https://doi.org/10.1017/inp.2024.40
Received: 29 July 2024; Accepted: 6 December 2024; Published: 14 March 2025
KEYWORDS
community science
invasive alien plant species
management
population dynamics
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