| Literature DB >> 33119582 |
Ivan Jarić1,2, Uri Roll3, Robert Arlinghaus4,5, Jonathan Belmaker6,7, Yan Chen8, Victor China9, Karel Douda10, Franz Essl11, Sonja C Jähnig4,12, Jonathan M Jeschke4,13,14, Gregor Kalinkat4, Lukáš Kalous10, Richard Ladle15, Robert J Lennox16, Rui Rosa17, Valerio Sbragaglia4,18, Kate Sherren8, Marek Šmejkal1, Andrea Soriano-Redondo19,20, Allan T Souza1, Christian Wolter4, Ricardo A Correia15,21,22,23.
Abstract
The ongoing digital revolution in the age of big data is opening new research opportunities. Culturomics and iEcology, two emerging research areas based on the analysis of online data resources, can provide novel scientific insights and inform conservation and management efforts. To date, culturomics and iEcology have been applied primarily in the terrestrial realm. Here, we advocate for expanding such applications to the aquatic realm by providing a brief overview of these new approaches and outlining key areas in which culturomics and iEcology are likely to have the highest impact, including the management of protected areas; fisheries; flagship species identification; detection and distribution of threatened, rare, and alien species; assessment of ecosystem status and anthropogenic impacts; and social impact assessment. When deployed in the right context with awareness of potential biases, culturomics and iEcology are ripe for rapid development as low-cost research approaches based on data available from digital sources, with increasingly diverse applications for aquatic ecosystems.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33119582 PMCID: PMC7595319 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3000935
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Biol ISSN: 1544-9173 Impact factor: 8.029
Fig 1Examples of aquatic culturomics and iEcology studies.
(A) Social engagement of marine recreational anglers and spearfishers targeting common dentex (Dentex dentex), an iconic species for Mediterranean fisheries, based on videos posted on YouTube [12]; upper photo—common dentex, lower photo—spearfisher. (B) Potential aquatic flagship species identified based on their popularity (relative internet search frequency) [59]; presented are top-ranked marine (killer whale, Orcinus orca, and great hammerhead, Sphyrna mokarran) and freshwater species (hippopotamus, Hippopotamus amphibius, and platypus, Ornithorhynchus anatinus). (C) Mapping of cultural ecosystem service hotspots in a marine protected area, based on social media photographs [11]. (D) Conceptual landscape perception map, based on statistical relationships between activities, values, and features coded from landscape images and captions on Instagram, from the proposed headpond area of the now-approved Site C dam, Peace River, British Columbia, Canada [6,68]. See the supporting information (S1 Text) for image attributions.
Fig 2Overview of challenges and biases associated with conservation culturomics and iEcology research, divided into 5 groups: sociocultural aspects, accessibility issues, geographic factors, issues related to data sources, and ethical issues.
It should be noted that some of the listed issues also represent key research subjects for the field of culturomics.