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Over 1K volunteers for Kerala Bird Atlas

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New Delhi, Feb 21: Possibly for the first time for a state in Asia, a citizen science effort has resulted into a massive mapping exercise of Kerala’s avian riches which is compiled into the Kerala Bird Atlas (KBA) that maps the distribution and abundance of birds across the state.
Over 1,000 volunteers systematically surveyed 4,000 locations in each of two seasons – dry season (January-March) and wet season (July-September) – across Kerala for over 600 days across five years. The KBA is Asia’s largest bird atlas in terms of geographical extent, sampling effort and species coverage. “Species count was higher in the dry season than in the wet season. Species richness (count) and evenness were higher in the northern and central districts than in the southern districts. High elevation regions of the southern Western Ghats were the largest contiguous areas lacking sufficient sampling. We found that most of the endemics were concentrated in the Western Ghats, but threatened species were as likely to occur along the coasts as in the Ghats,” said a multi-author study based on the dataset published in a peer-reviewed, open access journal ‘Current Science’ last week said.
Approximately 70 per cent of the Kerala bird species were recorded during the excercise. Ten most abundant species contributed 31 per cent while 94 very rare species contributed 0.1 per cent to the entire dataset.
Perhaps, recognising the impact of such citizen-science based research, the journal has put up this multi-author work on the cover page of its latest edition.
Envisaged as a five-year activity starting 2015, the field surveys for the KBA closed on September 13, 2020. “This data was analysed to understand the patterns of species richness and abundance across Kerala as well as recommendations were made on how to conduct similar surveys in other parts of the country,” a release said.
Unlike citizen’s science driven exercises (e.g. bird surveys) and online platforms (e.g. eBird) that provide voluminous data on bird occurrence but are semi-structured in nature of their data collection making it difficult to compare bird distribution across space and time, the Bird Atlases are based on standardized surveys and describe the distribution of bird species over a predefined region and have fewer biases, and thus are better suited for use in research, the study authors said. The KBA dataset is a valuable resource for testing various ecological hypotheses and suggesting science-backed conservation measures. KBA model could be replicated for similar atlases in other states or biogeographic regions of India. (IANS)

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