How citizen science boosted primary knowledge on fungal biodiversity in Denmark

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Standard

How citizen science boosted primary knowledge on fungal biodiversity in Denmark. / Heilmann-Clausen, J.; Bruun, Hans Henrik; Ejrnæs, Rasmus; Frøslev, Tobias Guldberg; Læssøe, Thomas; Petersen, Jens H.

In: Biological Conservation, Vol. 237, 2019, p. 366-372.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Heilmann-Clausen, J, Bruun, HH, Ejrnæs, R, Frøslev, TG, Læssøe, T & Petersen, JH 2019, 'How citizen science boosted primary knowledge on fungal biodiversity in Denmark', Biological Conservation, vol. 237, pp. 366-372. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2019.07.008

APA

Heilmann-Clausen, J., Bruun, H. H., Ejrnæs, R., Frøslev, T. G., Læssøe, T., & Petersen, J. H. (2019). How citizen science boosted primary knowledge on fungal biodiversity in Denmark. Biological Conservation, 237, 366-372. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2019.07.008

Vancouver

Heilmann-Clausen J, Bruun HH, Ejrnæs R, Frøslev TG, Læssøe T, Petersen JH. How citizen science boosted primary knowledge on fungal biodiversity in Denmark. Biological Conservation. 2019;237:366-372. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2019.07.008

Author

Heilmann-Clausen, J. ; Bruun, Hans Henrik ; Ejrnæs, Rasmus ; Frøslev, Tobias Guldberg ; Læssøe, Thomas ; Petersen, Jens H. / How citizen science boosted primary knowledge on fungal biodiversity in Denmark. In: Biological Conservation. 2019 ; Vol. 237. pp. 366-372.

Bibtex

@article{de1f32a3bf9a4e929d096c43ff926f83,
title = "How citizen science boosted primary knowledge on fungal biodiversity in Denmark",
abstract = "The Danish Fungal Atlas was a citizen science project aiming to map Danish macrofungi over five years (2009–13). The atlas contributed >235,000 records of fruit-body forming Basidiomycota, adding to about 195,000 fungal records from earlier periods. The new records increased the average number of species known per 10 km × 10 km grid cell by 75% from 125 to 218 species. We recorded 197 species as new to Denmark, extending the number of known basidiomycote species by 7%. At least 15 species appeared to be new to science. Among the new Danish records, species with northern distribution ranges were significantly overrepresented, in marked contrast to climate change predictions. Species with inconspicuous or subterranean fruit bodies were overrepresented among both the new Danish species and those only recorded before the project period, indicating low recording probability to be an important driver for the turnover in species recorded. Hence, the main drivers of novel fungal discoveries were 1) intensive sampling effort by citizen scientists guided by professional mycologists and 2) improved taxonomic knowledge. Summarizing over the last 100 years, an exponential increase in known macrofungal diversity in Denmark is evident, suggesting that we are still far from having a complete overview. This is striking, considering that Denmark is among the best-studied land areas on the globe. We conclude that citizen science projects, if appropriately designed, have a huge potential to boost primary knowledge on fungal biodiversity.",
keywords = "Global change, Macrofungi, Nitrogen deposition, Species discovery",
author = "J. Heilmann-Clausen and Bruun, {Hans Henrik} and Rasmus Ejrn{\ae}s and Fr{\o}slev, {Tobias Guldberg} and Thomas L{\ae}ss{\o}e and Petersen, {Jens H.}",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.1016/j.biocon.2019.07.008",
language = "English",
volume = "237",
pages = "366--372",
journal = "Biological Conservation",
issn = "0006-3207",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - How citizen science boosted primary knowledge on fungal biodiversity in Denmark

AU - Heilmann-Clausen, J.

AU - Bruun, Hans Henrik

AU - Ejrnæs, Rasmus

AU - Frøslev, Tobias Guldberg

AU - Læssøe, Thomas

AU - Petersen, Jens H.

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - The Danish Fungal Atlas was a citizen science project aiming to map Danish macrofungi over five years (2009–13). The atlas contributed >235,000 records of fruit-body forming Basidiomycota, adding to about 195,000 fungal records from earlier periods. The new records increased the average number of species known per 10 km × 10 km grid cell by 75% from 125 to 218 species. We recorded 197 species as new to Denmark, extending the number of known basidiomycote species by 7%. At least 15 species appeared to be new to science. Among the new Danish records, species with northern distribution ranges were significantly overrepresented, in marked contrast to climate change predictions. Species with inconspicuous or subterranean fruit bodies were overrepresented among both the new Danish species and those only recorded before the project period, indicating low recording probability to be an important driver for the turnover in species recorded. Hence, the main drivers of novel fungal discoveries were 1) intensive sampling effort by citizen scientists guided by professional mycologists and 2) improved taxonomic knowledge. Summarizing over the last 100 years, an exponential increase in known macrofungal diversity in Denmark is evident, suggesting that we are still far from having a complete overview. This is striking, considering that Denmark is among the best-studied land areas on the globe. We conclude that citizen science projects, if appropriately designed, have a huge potential to boost primary knowledge on fungal biodiversity.

AB - The Danish Fungal Atlas was a citizen science project aiming to map Danish macrofungi over five years (2009–13). The atlas contributed >235,000 records of fruit-body forming Basidiomycota, adding to about 195,000 fungal records from earlier periods. The new records increased the average number of species known per 10 km × 10 km grid cell by 75% from 125 to 218 species. We recorded 197 species as new to Denmark, extending the number of known basidiomycote species by 7%. At least 15 species appeared to be new to science. Among the new Danish records, species with northern distribution ranges were significantly overrepresented, in marked contrast to climate change predictions. Species with inconspicuous or subterranean fruit bodies were overrepresented among both the new Danish species and those only recorded before the project period, indicating low recording probability to be an important driver for the turnover in species recorded. Hence, the main drivers of novel fungal discoveries were 1) intensive sampling effort by citizen scientists guided by professional mycologists and 2) improved taxonomic knowledge. Summarizing over the last 100 years, an exponential increase in known macrofungal diversity in Denmark is evident, suggesting that we are still far from having a complete overview. This is striking, considering that Denmark is among the best-studied land areas on the globe. We conclude that citizen science projects, if appropriately designed, have a huge potential to boost primary knowledge on fungal biodiversity.

KW - Global change

KW - Macrofungi

KW - Nitrogen deposition

KW - Species discovery

U2 - 10.1016/j.biocon.2019.07.008

DO - 10.1016/j.biocon.2019.07.008

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85069563660

VL - 237

SP - 366

EP - 372

JO - Biological Conservation

JF - Biological Conservation

SN - 0006-3207

ER -

ID: 226488733