16 research outputs found

    Citizen science: a new approach to advance ecology, education, and conservation

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    Citizen science has a long history in the ecological sciences and has made substantial contributions to science, education, and society. Developments in information technology during the last few decades have created new opportunities for citizen science to engage ever larger audiences of volunteers to help address some of ecology’s most pressing issues, such as global environmental change. Using online tools, volunteers can find projects that match their interests and learn the skills and protocols required to develop questions, collect data, submit data, and help process and analyze data online. Citizen science has become increasingly important for its ability to engage large numbers of volunteers to generate observations at scales or resolutions unattainable by individual researchers. As a coupled natural and human approach, citizen science can also help researchers access local knowledge and implement conservation projects that might be impossible otherwise. In Japan, however, the value of citizen science to science and society is still underappreciated. Here we present case studies of citizen science in Japan, the United States, and the United Kingdom, and describe how citizen science is used to tackle key questions in ecology and conservation, including spatial and macro-ecology, management of threatened and invasive species, and monitoring of biodiversity. We also discuss the importance of data quality, volunteer recruitment, program evaluation, and the integration of science and human systems in citizen science projects. Finally, we outline some of the primary challenges facing citizen science and its future.Dr. Janis L. Dickinson was the keynote speaker at the international symposium at the 61th annual meeting of the Ecological Society of Japan. We appreciate the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology in Japan for providing grant to Hiromi Kobori (25282044). Tatsuya Amano is financially supported by the European Commission’s Marie Curie International Incoming Fellowship Programme (PIIF-GA-2011- 303221). The findings and conclusions in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the funding agencies or the Department of the Interior or the US Government.This is the final version of the article. It was first available from Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11284-015-1314-

    Conservation for Satoyama, the Traditional Landscape of Japan

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    Volume: 62Start Page: 2End Page: 1

    Bacterial Plasmids in Antarctic Natural Microbial Assemblages

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    Samples of psychrophilic and psychrotrophic bacteria were collected from sea ice, seawater, sediments, and benthic or ice-associated animals in McMurdo Sound, Antarctica. A total of 155 strains were isolated and tested for the presence of plasmids by DNA agarose gel electrophoresis. Thirty-one percent of the isolates carried at least one kind of plasmid. Bacterial isolates taken from sediments showed the highest plasmid incidence (42%), and isolates from seawater showed the lowest plasmid incidence (20%). Plasmids were significantly more frequent in the strains which had been first isolated from low-nutrient media (46%) than in the strains which had been isolated from high-nutrient media (25%). Multiple forms of plasmids were observed in two-thirds of the plasmid-carrying strains. A majority of the plasmids detected were estimated to have a mass of 10 megadaltons or less. Among 48 plasmid-carrying strains, 7 showed antibiotic resistance. It is concluded that bacterial plasmids are ubiquitous in natural microbial assemblages of the pristine marine ecosystem of Antarctica

    Sustainable Cities

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    Sustainable Cities

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    https://digital.sandiego.edu/motions/1143/thumbnail.jp

    Indirect positive effects of agricultural modernization on the abundance of Japanese tree frog tadpoles in rice fields through the release from predators

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    In Japan, the density of Japanese tree frogs (Hyla japonica) may not be necessary high in traditional rice fields compared to modern fields because the modernization of drainage systems from shallow earthen ditches to deep concrete-line ones reduces the abundance of predators/competitors for tadpoles, such as dojo loach (Misgurnus anguillicaudatus). This hypothesis was tested using two approaches. First, laboratory experiments revealed that the presence of the loach significantly reduced the survival of tree frog eggs and tadpoles. Second, observational studies in rice fields showed that the direct effect of modernization on tadpoles was not significant but the indirect (and thus total) effects were weakly positive due to the reduction in the density of dojo loach. Our study suggests that recent agricultural intensification in rice fields does not negatively impact all aquatic species but that some species may not be affected or can even flourish by having tolerance for the changes and release from potential predators or competitors
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