What can we learn about wildlife killed by vehicles from a citizen science project? A comparison of scientific and amateur tropical roadkill records

What can we learn about wildlife killed by vehicles from a citizen science project? A comparison of scientific and amateur tropical roadkill records

Authors

  • Julián Monge-Nájera Laboratorio de Ecología Urbana, Universidad Estatal a Distancia (UNED), 2050 San José, Costa Rica

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22458/urj.v10i1.2041

Keywords:

roadkill, road mortality, iNaturalist, citizen science

Abstract

In 1995, Costa Rica had one of the first citizen science projects on roadkills, which identified the most frequent species and their rates by road length, and currently it has one of the largest iNaturalist projects on the same subject. Here I assess what information can be extracted from this type of project and how results compare with those from professionals. I analyzed over 900 records from Fauna Silvestre en Carreteras de Costa Rica, from October 2013 through August 2017. There was no sexual difference in participation or productivity, but per capita output was 12 times higher than in the Brazilian CBEE project. Some species suffered higher mortality during reproduction, while the anteater T. mexicana suffered more in the dry season, when food was scarce. Roadkills matched seasonal changes in traffic routes and the geographic distribution of records in relation to urban areas reflected the ecology of each species. At least for this case, citizen science can provide reliable data about species frequency in roadkills, and data were detailed enough to identify seasonal and geographic differences at the species level for the mammals and reptiles that made up the majority of records.

References

Alfaro, V. C., & Quesada, F. D. (2013). Atropello de mamíferos silvestres en la ruta de acceso al cantón de Liberia, Guanacaste, Costa Rica. Revista Ventana, 7(1), 12-14.

Araya-Gamboa, D., & Salom-Pérez, R. (2013). Informe: Identificación de pasos de fauna y medidas de mitigación sobre el camino de la Ruta 415 dentro del Subcorredor Biológico “Paso del Jaguar”. Costa Rica: Panthera. Mimeografiado.

Arévalo, E., Arce, A., & Honda, W. (2012). Mortalidad de vertebrados en el límite sur oeste del Parque Nacional Carara, Costa Rica. Revista Mesoamericana, 12(2), 103.

Arévalo, J. E., Honda, W., Arce-Arias, A., & Häger, A. (2017). Spatio-temporal variation of roadkills show mass mortality events for amphibians in a highly trafficked road adjacent to a national park, Costa Rica. Revista de Biología Tropical, 65(4), 1261-1276.

Artavia, R. A. (2015). Identificación y caracterización de cruces de fauna silvestre en la sección de la ampliación de la carretera nacional Ruta 32, Limón, Costa Rica. Tesis de maestría. CATIE, Turrialba, Costa Rica.

Artavia, A., Jiménez, M., Martínez-Salinas, A., Pomareda, E., Araya-Gamboa, D., & Arévalo-Huezo, E. Registro de mamíferos silvestres en la sección de la ampliación de la Ruta 32, Limón, Costa Rica. Brenesia, 83-84, 37-46.

Chandler, M., See, L., Copas, K., Bonde, A. M., López, B. C., Danielsen, F., ... & Rosemartin, A. (2017). Contribution of citizen science towards international biodiversity monitoring. Biological Conservation, 213, 280-294.

Eloff, P., & Van Niekerk, A. (2008). Temporal patterns of animal-related traffic accidents in the Eastern Cape, South Africa. South African Journal of Wildlife Research, 38(2), 153-162.

Gutiérrez, S. D. R. (2017). Evaluación del riesgo de las carreteras nacionales para la fauna silvestre y el uso de ciencia ciudadana como herramienta para el monitoreo de fauna silvestre atropellada en Costa Rica. Tesis de maestría. Universidad Nacional, Heredia, Costa Rica.

Janzen, D. H., & Schoener, T. W. (1968). Differences in insect abundance and diversity between wetter and drier sites during a tropical dry season. Ecology, 49(1), 96-110.

Lewandowski, E., Caldwell, W., Elmquist, D., & Oberhauser, K. (2017). Public Perceptions of Citizen Science. Citizen Science: Theory and Practice, 2(1), 3

Monge-Nájera, J. (1996). Vertebrate mortality in tropical highways: The Costa Rican case. Vida Silvestre Neotropical, 5(2) ,154-156.

Monge-Nájera, J. (2018). Road kills in tropical ecosystems: a review with recommendations for new research and mitigation. Revista de Biología Tropical, 66, in press.

Nadjar, O. D. O., & De la Ossa, J. (2013). Fauna silvestre atropellada en dos vías principales que rodean los Montes de María, Sucre, Colombia. Revista Colombiana de Ciencia Animal-RECIA, 5(1), 158-164.

Paul, K., Quinn, M. S., Huijser, M. P., Graham, J., & Broberg, L. (2014). An evaluation of a citizen science data collection program for recording wildlife observations along a highway. Journal of environmental management, 139, 180-187.

Paul, K., Quinn, M. S., Huijser, M. P., Graham, J., & Broberg, L. (2014). An evaluation of a citizen science data collection program for recording wildlife observations along a highway. Journal of environmental management, 139, 180-187.

Pomareda, E. (2012). Atropello de fauna Silvestre y su rescate en Cañas, Guanacaste. Presentación en Foro: “Marco Legal para la Regulación del Impacto de Infraestructura Vial y Eléctrica en la Vida Silvestre en Costa Rica”. UNED. San José, Costa Rica.

Rojas-Chacón, E. (2011). Atropello de vertebrados en una carretera secundaria en Costa Rica. Vertebrate road-kills in a secondary road in Costa Rica. UNED Research Journal, 3(1), 81-84.

Sáenz, J., Langen, T., & Torres, L. (2012) Mortalidad de fauna silvestre por atropellamiento en la carretera interamericana que cruza el Área de Conservación Guanacaste y Determinación de pasos de fauna. Presentación en Foro: “Marco Legal para la Regulación del Impacto de Infraestructura Vial y Eléctrica en la Vida Silvestre en Costa Rica”. UNED. San José, Costa Rica.

Theobald, E. J., Ettinger, A. K., Burgess, H. K., DeBey, L. B., Schmidt, N. R., Froehlich, H. E., ... & Parrish, J. K. (2015). Global change and local solutions: Tapping the unrealized potential of citizen science for biodiversity research. Biological Conservation, 181, 236-244.

Torres T., M.L. (2011). Funcionalidad de estructuras subterráneas como pasos de fauna en la carretera interamericana norte que cruza el área de conservación Guanacaste, Costa Rica. Tesis de maestría. CATIE, Turrialba, Costa Rica.

Valenzuela, D., & Ceballos, G. (2000). Habitat selection, home range, and activity of the white-nosed coati (Nasua narica) in a Mexican tropical dry forest. Journal of mammalogy, 81(3), 810-819.

Vincent, J. R., Carson, R. T., DeShazo, J. R., Schwabe, K. A., Ahmad, I., Chong, S. K., ... & Potts, M. D. (2014). Tropical countries may be willing to pay more to protect their forests. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 111(28), 10113-10118.

Additional Files

Published

2018-02-28

How to Cite

Monge-Nájera, J. (2018). What can we learn about wildlife killed by vehicles from a citizen science project? A comparison of scientific and amateur tropical roadkill records. UNED Research Journal, 10. https://doi.org/10.22458/urj.v10i1.2041
Loading...