Publication Date:
2019
abstract:
The growing interest in emerging environmental crisis has increased the level of public attention and the willingness
to take part in participatory science projects, commonly defined with the term "Citizen Science". This phenomenon can
be recorded globally in many national contexts, with a prevalence in anglophone and more industrialized countries. In the
biodiversity sector, the growing demand for public involvement has been declined in many different ways, with solutions
aimed at providing cognitive and participatory tools. Among these, one of the best known is the BioBlitz: a 24-hour event
held in a specific place with the aim of listing as many living species as possible. This work presents the data collected
during the first two BioBlitzes organized by the Maremma Natural History Museum in 2013 and 2014. Both were made
in the area of the San Felice Oasis, near the terminal part of the San Leopoldo ditch. During the BioBlitz, data collected
attested the presence of 616 different taxonomic entities, of which 507 were identified at the level of species and 22 at the
level of subspecies. The rest were identified at higher taxonomic levels. Eleven alien species, one endemic species, 33 species
protected by national and international laws and / or directives and 9 species at risk of extinction were identified.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Bioblitz
List of contributors:
Mori, Emiliano; Cianferoni, Fabio
Published in: