Participatory science to complement professional data: Towards conservation of declining native freshwater fish, the crucian carp

Abstract The participatory science approach helps to gather relevant ecological data with high coverage and reduce time and costs to solve intriguing conservation issues. However, the precision and additional value of using participatory science for monitoring freshwater fish species with similar ap...

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Main Authors: Kiran Thomas, Lukáš Kalous, Marek Brabec, Petr Velenský, Milan Gottwald, Daniel Bartoň, Sandip Tapkir, Yevdokiia Stepanyshyna, Zuzana Šmejkalová, Marek Šmejkal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2025-04-01
Series:Ecological Solutions and Evidence
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/2688-8319.70055
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author Kiran Thomas
Lukáš Kalous
Marek Brabec
Petr Velenský
Milan Gottwald
Daniel Bartoň
Sandip Tapkir
Yevdokiia Stepanyshyna
Zuzana Šmejkalová
Marek Šmejkal
author_facet Kiran Thomas
Lukáš Kalous
Marek Brabec
Petr Velenský
Milan Gottwald
Daniel Bartoň
Sandip Tapkir
Yevdokiia Stepanyshyna
Zuzana Šmejkalová
Marek Šmejkal
author_sort Kiran Thomas
collection DOAJ
description Abstract The participatory science approach helps to gather relevant ecological data with high coverage and reduce time and costs to solve intriguing conservation issues. However, the precision and additional value of using participatory science for monitoring freshwater fish species with similar appearances is not well understood. In this study, we aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of participatory science in distinguishing between critically endangered and invasive species within the genus Carassius, which are relatively similar in appearance. Native crucian carp (Carassius carassius) has encountered a sharp population decline in central Europe and is currently critically endangered in the Czech Republic, prompting conservation measures. The participatory science project ‘Save the Crucian Carp’ was launched to map its distribution and to conserve and restore the population. We aimed to analyse the effectiveness of this project which recorded the current and historical distribution of the crucian carp and the invasive gibel carp (Carassius gibelio), which is largely behind this decline. A total of 953 volunteers contributed information on species distribution and occurrence details. These web data were analysed to assess respondents' species identification skills, opinions about the project, and the impact of media outreach on volunteer participation. Field verification of occurrence tips revealed an accuracy of 35% for crucian carp presence. A positive correlation was identified between respondents' species identification quiz scores and the number of tips they provided. Respondents aged 31 to 50 showed greater enthusiasm for conservation efforts compared to other age groups. The increase in volunteer participation driven by media outreach underscores the critical role of raising public awareness about the freshwater biodiversity crisis to ensure conservation success through participatory science. Data collected via participatory science demonstrated greater regularity and coverage compared to the Nature Conservation Agency of the Czech Republic (NCA) data, emphasizing the importance of collaboration with the public to provide a stronger foundation for conservation decisions. Practical implication. This project demonstrates the potential of participatory science for conserving other freshwater fish species on a global scale.
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spelling doaj-art-223be94f71a64cd690c0ee9dbf81512f2025-08-20T03:28:56ZengWileyEcological Solutions and Evidence2688-83192025-04-0162n/an/a10.1002/2688-8319.70055Participatory science to complement professional data: Towards conservation of declining native freshwater fish, the crucian carpKiran Thomas0Lukáš Kalous1Marek Brabec2Petr Velenský3Milan Gottwald4Daniel Bartoň5Sandip Tapkir6Yevdokiia Stepanyshyna7Zuzana Šmejkalová8Marek Šmejkal9Institute of Hydrobiology Biology Centre of the Czech Academy of Sciences České Budějovice Czech RepublicFaculty of Agrobiology, Food and Natural Resources Czech University of Life Sciences Prague Prague Czech RepublicInstitute of Computer Science Czech Academy of Sciences Prague Czech RepublicZoo Praha Prague Czech RepublicFaculty of Agrobiology, Food and Natural Resources Czech University of Life Sciences Prague Prague Czech RepublicInstitute of Hydrobiology Biology Centre of the Czech Academy of Sciences České Budějovice Czech RepublicInstitute of Hydrobiology Biology Centre of the Czech Academy of Sciences České Budějovice Czech RepublicInstitute of Hydrobiology Biology Centre of the Czech Academy of Sciences České Budějovice Czech RepublicInstitute of Hydrobiology Biology Centre of the Czech Academy of Sciences České Budějovice Czech RepublicInstitute of Hydrobiology Biology Centre of the Czech Academy of Sciences České Budějovice Czech RepublicAbstract The participatory science approach helps to gather relevant ecological data with high coverage and reduce time and costs to solve intriguing conservation issues. However, the precision and additional value of using participatory science for monitoring freshwater fish species with similar appearances is not well understood. In this study, we aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of participatory science in distinguishing between critically endangered and invasive species within the genus Carassius, which are relatively similar in appearance. Native crucian carp (Carassius carassius) has encountered a sharp population decline in central Europe and is currently critically endangered in the Czech Republic, prompting conservation measures. The participatory science project ‘Save the Crucian Carp’ was launched to map its distribution and to conserve and restore the population. We aimed to analyse the effectiveness of this project which recorded the current and historical distribution of the crucian carp and the invasive gibel carp (Carassius gibelio), which is largely behind this decline. A total of 953 volunteers contributed information on species distribution and occurrence details. These web data were analysed to assess respondents' species identification skills, opinions about the project, and the impact of media outreach on volunteer participation. Field verification of occurrence tips revealed an accuracy of 35% for crucian carp presence. A positive correlation was identified between respondents' species identification quiz scores and the number of tips they provided. Respondents aged 31 to 50 showed greater enthusiasm for conservation efforts compared to other age groups. The increase in volunteer participation driven by media outreach underscores the critical role of raising public awareness about the freshwater biodiversity crisis to ensure conservation success through participatory science. Data collected via participatory science demonstrated greater regularity and coverage compared to the Nature Conservation Agency of the Czech Republic (NCA) data, emphasizing the importance of collaboration with the public to provide a stronger foundation for conservation decisions. Practical implication. This project demonstrates the potential of participatory science for conserving other freshwater fish species on a global scale.https://doi.org/10.1002/2688-8319.70055biodiversity crisiscitizen scienceculturomicsinvasive species managementnative species conservationstatistical modelling
spellingShingle Kiran Thomas
Lukáš Kalous
Marek Brabec
Petr Velenský
Milan Gottwald
Daniel Bartoň
Sandip Tapkir
Yevdokiia Stepanyshyna
Zuzana Šmejkalová
Marek Šmejkal
Participatory science to complement professional data: Towards conservation of declining native freshwater fish, the crucian carp
Ecological Solutions and Evidence
biodiversity crisis
citizen science
culturomics
invasive species management
native species conservation
statistical modelling
title Participatory science to complement professional data: Towards conservation of declining native freshwater fish, the crucian carp
title_full Participatory science to complement professional data: Towards conservation of declining native freshwater fish, the crucian carp
title_fullStr Participatory science to complement professional data: Towards conservation of declining native freshwater fish, the crucian carp
title_full_unstemmed Participatory science to complement professional data: Towards conservation of declining native freshwater fish, the crucian carp
title_short Participatory science to complement professional data: Towards conservation of declining native freshwater fish, the crucian carp
title_sort participatory science to complement professional data towards conservation of declining native freshwater fish the crucian carp
topic biodiversity crisis
citizen science
culturomics
invasive species management
native species conservation
statistical modelling
url https://doi.org/10.1002/2688-8319.70055
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