Parker Et Al. 2018
Parker Et Al. 2018
Parker Et Al. 2018
Authors: Parker, S.S. 1; Pauly, G.B.2; Moore, J.3; Fraga, N.S.4; Knapp, J.J.5; Principe, Z.6 2
;
Angeles, CA 90095
Keywords
Archaeology, botanical garden, Bureau of Land Management, citizen science, expert bioblitz,
Expert bioblitzes generate conservation-relevant data, enhance research capacity, and build working
Abstract
This article has been accepted for publication and undergone full peer review but has not been
through the copyediting, typesetting, pagination and proofreading process, which may lead to
differences between this version and the Version of Record. Please cite this article as doi:
10.1111/cobi.13103.
ways to rapidly deliver high-quality survey data. To address this challenge, several rapid assessment
approaches have been developed since the early 1990s. These typically involve large areas, take
many months to complete, and are not appropriate when conservation-relevant survey data are
quickly needed for a specific locale. In contrast, bioblitzes are designed to quickly collect site-specific
survey data. While bioblitzes are commonly used to achieve educational or public engagement goals,
conservation-relevant data while simultaneously enhancing research capacity and building working
Several expert bioblitzes have recently taken place on lands of conservation concern in Southern
California, and have involved the collaborative efforts of government agencies, non-profit
organizations, botanic gardens, museums, and universities. We document how expert bioblitz results
for rapid deployment of expert bioblitzes in the future; and fostered collaboration and
conservation funding becomes increasingly scarce, expert bioblitzes can play an increasingly
2
Introduction
Conservation practitioners have long faced the challenge of making decisions using limited
information. Uncertainty and information gaps are pervasive in ecological data (Regan et al. 2002),
and severe gaps may lead to inaction or undesirable outcomes (Regan et al. 2005). Many
distribution and abundance of target species. Unfortunately, fundamental occurrence data is often
unavailable or out-of-date. For this reason, the first steps in systematic conservation planning
(Margules & Pressey 2000) commonly involve identifying data gaps and collecting field data to fill
them, thereby providing accurate and timely information on the localities of species within a
planning area. This information is needed to make and implement better conservation management
Various biodiversity assessment methods have been developed to gather occurrence data and
inventory species, natural communities, and ecosystems (Table 1). These efforts include cataloguing
the presence of priority plant communities and completing landscape-scale inventories (Noss 1987),
establishing natural heritage programs dedicated to cataloging the biodiversity of a given state or
region (Groves et al. 1995), and completing comprehensive bioassessments to gauge ecosystem
health (Bailey et al. 2014). While these efforts contribute greatly to generating a more complete
understanding of the natural world, and therefore allow for more informed conservation decision-
making, several challenges exist. Professionally conducted, systematic field surveys may be one of
3
the best solutions for filling knowledge gaps, but they can be slow and costly (Margules & Pressey
2000). Natural heritage programs have faced criticism for being expensive, difficult to maintain, and
patchy in coverage (Bittman 2001). They also require continued updates as natural and technological
systems change. Securing adequate funding and targeting limited resources available at the expert
level to provide information on the places and topics of conservation concern are continuing
challenges (Braunisch et al. 2012). Further, many existing assessment methodologies (e.g., Rapid
Ecological Assessments, the Rapid Assessment Program, and Ecoregional Assessments) focus on
large areas (e.g., landscapes, regions, or ecoregions) for which little existing biodiversity information
has been synthesized, and typically take many months to complete (Table 1). These methodologies
are therefore not appropriate for conservation opportunities at smaller geographic scales or for
assessments where knowledge of existing biodiversity is relatively high for the broader region—as is
often the case in developed nations—but knowledge about the concentration of conservation-
relevant taxa and resources is needed for a specific locale within a broader region.
The challenge of how to best conduct new, expert-based field surveys to address data gaps and
being considered as a primary conservation strategy. A conservation organization or land trust will
often develop acquisition plans to identify for purchase the properties most valuable for
conservation (e.g., Parker et al. 2014). However, barriers to private property access may impede
fieldwork during the planning phase (Hilty & Merenlender 2003). Limited time and funding
4
designated for field reconnaissance during acquisition often requires that field assessments be rapid,
potentially narrow in focus, and carried out during the “ g” seas f easily fi di g a d
identifying taxa of interest; that a limited number of surveyors be involved; and that these
individuals be well-organized and able to conduct their work with minimal guidance and supervision.
Similar challenges also arise for federal, state and local land management agencies seeking to better
manage natural resources. Permission for access may be easier to obtain on public lands, but many
are remote and distant from researchers with the appropriate expertise. Under circumstances like
these, where land management decisions require new, field-based information, conservation
practitioners must find a way of optimizing the rapid delivery of low-cost and high-quality survey
data.
5
Rapid Field Surveys: the BioBlitz
To address the challenges outlined above, conservation practitioners are increasingly turning to a
new type of rapid field-based assessment: the i litz The te m “ i litz” (als itte “bi blitz”
“bi -blitz”) as c i ed by the Nati al Pa k Se vice (NPS) to describe a 1996 survey effort conducted
in Kenilworth Park and Aquatic Gardens in Washington, D.C., and in the intervening years has been
broadly adopted by educators, scientists, and conservation practitioners (Laforest et al. 2013).
Typically, a bioblitz involves a rapid field survey effort where volunteers document as many species
According to Droege (2004), one of the founders of the modern-day bi blitz c cept “the ame a d
concept of the BioBlitz is not registered, not copyrighted, not trademarked, and not a government
thi g It’s a idea that can be used, adapted, and modified by any group, who should freely use the
ame i litz f thei pu p ses” This stateme t may stem pa tially f m a u de sta di g
that bioblitz-type surveys are not new; volunteer-based collection of natural history information
dates back centuries (Miller-Rushing et al. 2012). In recent years, the engagement of volunteers in
gathe i g scie tific i f mati (a app ach fte efe ed t as “citize scie ce”) has gai ed
increasing attention (Bonney et al. 2014). Individual citizen science projects may contribute to
collective knowledge about the natural world, but direct applicability of these projects to on-the-
ground conservation management and decision-making varies (Conrad & Hilchey 2011; Ballard et al.
2017). In a review of natural history museum-led citizen science efforts, Ballard et al. (2017) found
6
that bioblitzes contributed to site and species management more than any other type of citizen
science program; they also found that partnering with land managers produced positive
conservation outcomes.
Bioblitzes are growing in popularity; as of October 2017, the citizen science platform iNaturalist
(https://www.inaturalist.org) listed over 1,000 bioblitz projects involving at least five participants
and 25 observations, and institutions and organizations from around the world have developed
guidance for bioblitz organizers (e.g., Censky 2001, Hepburn et al. 2015). Although the raw
observation data generated during a bioblitz may be available through platforms such as iNaturalist
or the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (https://www.gbif.org), the summaries, results, and
key findings from bioblitzes that have potential conservation management relevance are rarely
published in the peer-reviewed literature (Laforest et al. 2013), and are therefore less likely to be
widely available. A May 2017 literature search using ISI Web of Science
records contained the sea ch te m “bi blitz” “bi -blitz” The ldest as published i 2003 A
similar search using Google Scholar (https://scholar.google.com/) returned about 1,230 results, only
a few of which are peer-reviewed journal articles. One notable publication is a side-by-side field trial
demonstrating that for some commonly-detected taxonomic groups (salamanders, reptiles, and
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methods (Foster et al. 2013). This study suggests that a bioblitz may be a cost-effective way to
rapidly generate conservation-relevant data, at least for larger, more easily surveyed organisms.
Museums, aquariums, zoos, botanical gardens, institutions of higher learning, and federal agencies
contribute directly to conservation education and conservation science (Miller et al. 2004), and are
increasingly the hosts and organizers of bioblitzes. For this reason, staff members of these
institutions have become more familiar with bioblitz events over time. As these events become
increasingly common, it becomes easier to adapt the bioblitz concept to meet the needs and
interests of conservation practitioners such as land managers, while also involving institutional
bioblitzes to better meet the needs of conservation. The most fundamental modification involves
the primary purpose of these events. Bioblitzes are often conducted by entities with education as
part of their mission, and are explicitly used as an educational and public engagement tool, often to
a broad public audience (Lundmark 2003). By primarily or exclusively involving participants who are
collaborative, field-ready scientists, the focus of an event can shift from education and outreach, or
a mix of education and research goals, to one primarily focused on filling information gaps to better
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inform conservation decisions. We use the term “expe t bi blitz” t efe t apid field-based survey
efforts within a specific geographic area that involve a team of professional scientists and
taxa and/or other resources, (2) enhance research capacity, and (3) build working partnerships
The first objective of an expert bioblitz is to generate survey data that can be used by conservation
practitioners. Usable data fall into two main categories: information used to make management
decisions, and information used to generate conservation interest because it reveals the presence of
phylogenetically significant, globally rare, or otherwise unique taxa that may serve as flagship
species for conservation (Walpole & Leader-Williams 2002). While almost any data collected by field
scientists could eventually be conservation relevant, studies indicate that most land management
decisions are based on experience and guesswork rather than evidence (Pullin et al. 2004;
Sutherland et al. 2004), suggesting that field-collected data are not typically used to guide
conservation efforts, or to enable better land management decisions. By involving both research
scientists and conservation practitioners, an expert bioblitz can help bridge the conservation
“ esea ch-impleme tati gap” (sensu Knight et al. 2008) by steering researchers towards collecting
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The second objective of an expert bioblitz is to enhance research capacity in locations or on topics
that are understudied, and where there are gaps in information that hinder evidence-based
decision-making for conservation and natural resource management. When organizing an expert
bioblitz, conservation practitioners who represent land trusts or other land-owning conservation
organizations can provide access to privately owned lands, some of which may otherwise be difficult
to access, or may never have been surveyed before (Hilty & Merenlender 2003). This can help
collection managers and curators address geographic and taxonomic gaps within their own
collections (Ponder et al. 2001), and can even result in the discovery of taxa that are new to science
(Ridling et al. 2014), or to the region being surveyed (Graeter et al. 2015).
The third objective of an expert bioblitz is to build working partnerships focused on conservation
concerns. Bioblitz organizers can initiate productive working relationships between agency staff,
other land managers, taxonomic experts, and other researchers. These relationships can be crucial
to expanding the geographic scope of field surveys and securing required collections permissions for
experts who otherwise lack connections to staff within federal, state, local and NGO land
management entities. Similarly, participating researchers can meet specialists from other
institutions, resulting in new collaborations and/or new or improved working relationships as part of
surveys together, but participation in an expert bioblitz can create opportunities for cross-
10
disciplinary synergy and exchange of information that may inform conservation management and
For researchers from collections-based museums and herbaria, there are several reciprocal benefits
museums and herbaria are storehouses of biogeographical information (Nielsen & West 1994), they
already support and conduct research that guides conservation decision-making. Curatorial and
research staff at these institutions may be deeply committed to seeing their work applied in a
practical conservation context (Kress et al. 2001) and may already conduct short collecting trips for
their own scientific needs, but they may not know what information is needed, when it is needed, or
who needs it to maximize conservation impact. Through an expert bioblitz, researchers can provide
immediate conservation-relevant outcomes from short collecting trips. Specimens collected during
an expert bioblitz may also be added to museum/herbarium collections (Spear et al. 2017). Many
institutions regard adding to their collections as part of their core missions but have experienced
noteworthy declines in their ability to do so in recent years (Prather et al. 2004). In turn, new
techniques are allowing analyses of specimens that may yield information on genetic relationships,
diet, change over time, and a suite of other factors that may be of great value to conservation
practitioners (Suarez and Tsutsui 2004; Lavoie 2013). Thus, facilitating specimen collections during
11
Expert BioBlitz Best Practices
Organizers must deliberately plan an expert bioblitz to address the objectives of generating usable
data, enhancing capacity, and building partnerships. Having conducted several of these events in
recent years, we have developed a set of best practices to guide planning and execution. This
includes guidance related to participant selection, strategic planning, event logistics, and data
reporting. Special attention must be paid to understanding the motivation for participation by
volunteer experts, as event hosts may not have funding to reimburse experts for their time.
Silvertown et al. (2013) describe best practices for motivating, recruiting, and retaining volunteers.
Below we describe some of the other considerations for leading a successful expert bioblitz.
Organizers of an expert bioblitz must clearly articulate their goals to volunteers participating in the
eve t While use f the te m “bi blitz” typically suggests that pa ticipants should record as many
taxa as possible, data needs for conservation vary. Instead of broad taxonomic coverage, organizers
may want participants to target specific taxa, or generate spatial assessments of species or
communities. Bioblitzes have largely embraced a broad view of biodiversity (Baker et al. 2014), but
taxonomic bias permeates all aspects of conservation, from research and planning to
implementation (Clark & May 2002; Darwall et al. 2011). Given the realities of conservation practice,
practical application of bioblitz-collected data may vary by taxonomic group or site, and it is
important for participants to understand what results are most usable by conservation practitioners.
These expectations are best communicated to potential participants well in advance of the event.
12
Organizers may place participants into groups based on taxonomic specialty, and assign leaders to
ga ize a g up’s activities. This prevents duplication of field effort, allows for better planning and
spatial coverage of the geographic area of interest, and aids in acquiring any necessary permits.
Teams may be active in different areas at different times of day (e.g. herpetologists are more likely
to survey at night, whereas ornithologists may be most active in the early morning). Therefore,
cross-disciplinary collaboration between experts can be promoted through informal social time (e.g.
over meals).
Organizers should anticipate and plan interventions to prevent conflicts that may arise between
exploration and resource preservation in areas with easily-disturbed features such as archaeological
sites, soil biological crusts, or sensitive plant communities. Coordination between experts using
disparate collection methodologies and managers responsible for protecting these features is key to
preventing and minimizing conflicts. With a smaller group of field-savvy scientists, an expert bioblitz
may have the advantage of generating less disturbance than a typical bioblitz event involving a
Methods of data collection during the event can involve a combination of traditional and recently-
developed techniques. Some experts will conduct taxon-focused surveys and keep lists with and
without voucher specimens. Newer techniques may include the use of data sharing platforms such
13
as eBird and iNaturalist, or other detection methods, such as acoustic bat detection, camera
trapping, DNA barcoding, or environmental DNA (eDNA) sampling. While iNaturalist, eBird, and
other open access sites are useful for sharing data and provide a record that is readily available to a
broad audience for inclusion in future analyses and potential conservation decision-making efforts
(Spear et al. 2017), these platforms are not optimized for the collection of all types of data. If the
event will include the collection of data that are non-biological, such as information about
archaeological sites, ecosystem processes, or geophysical features, organizers and participants must
decide how best to integrate data collection and reporting across disciplines, perhaps through
Rapid, field-based assessments focused on influencing specific conservation actions are beginning to
occur in various locations around the world. In November 2013, 21 researchers representing 11
the coral reefs of Cabo Pulmo in Mexico (Vanderplank et al. 2014). Likewise, for a week in April 2017,
25 scientists from four countries conducted surveys to document the aquatic and terrestrial
biodiversity of the Vjosa River valley of Albania (Graf et al., 2017). Both efforts resulted in
conservation actions; the Cabo Pulmo work led to a decision by the ati ’s auth ity
environment and natural resources to reject development plans for a large resort, while the Vjosa
14
River event led to the initiation of a campaign to stop the development of a dam and hydropower
plant.
Since 2015, several conservation-applicable, rapid field survey events have taken place on lands of
conservation concern in Southern California. Some of these events have been specifically billed as
expe t bi blitzes hile the s have bee te med “ a e pla t t easu e hu ts ” I all cases these
events were deliberately planned, executed, and documented to demonstrate the benefits of
and universities. Participants at each event were limited to an invited, targeted group of expert
researchers and highly experienced citizen scientists (typically veterans of other expert bioblitzes
and survey events), including individuals representing entities beyond the organizing parties. The
(Table 2). Participating researchers gained access to lands that were typically off-limits, thereby
increasing research capacity and benefitting museum and herbaria collections. Discoveries of new
archaeological sites as well as newly documented populations, species, and/or habitat associations
for plants and animals spurred follow-up studies. Below we discuss the elements of four of these
Southern California events, and how successful they were in generating conservation-relevant data,
15
The Tehachapi Region is geologically diverse, topographically complex, and relatively un-fragmented
narrowly endemic plants, invertebrates, and amphibians. While much of the region is under private
ownership, recent conservation investments have expanded access to lands, and provided an
opportunity to employ an expert bioblitz to increase knowledge of biological resources. This event
was a collaborative effort initiated by Tejon Ranch Conservancy that involved lands owned or
managed by The Nature Conservancy (TNC), Audubon Kern River Preserve, multiple private
The goals of this expert bioblitz were three-fold: (1) to catalog as many plants, birds, mammals,
amphibians, reptiles, insects, spiders, and lichens as possible in a 24-hour period to help inform
regional conservation work; (2) to demonstrate collaboration between the various conservation
entities in the region; (3) to build additional support for research and conservation in the region by
engaging new individuals and entities from the nearby Los Angeles and Bakersfield areas.
Sixty-five volunteer experts participated in this event. The event strengthened relationships between
participants and highlighted the importance of the region to scientists and institutions previously
unfamiliar with its rich biological resources (Table 2). Land managers and conservation practitioners
in the region can apply the knowledge gained from this event to refine management actions and
conservation priorities. Participants made new natural history discoveries and collected specimens
from under-sampled regions, providing evidence of enhanced research capacity (Table 2). The event
also reinforced the relationship between the organizations working in the region and among
16
institutions with complementary missions, specifically the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles
Chicago Valley is a relatively undisturbed valley located in California, near the center of the Mojave
Desert Ecoregion, and just a few km from the border with Nevada. It overlies an ancient, deep
g u d ate fl ‐path that feeds the Ama g sa Rive from the east. High groundwater levels in the
valley support a robust mesquite bosque and a desert spring. While most of Chicago Valley is Bureau
of Land Management (BLM) wilderness, over 400 hectares remain in private ownership, and have
bioblitz to explore privately owned lands in Chicago Valley that were available for purchase. We
invited a broad suite of volunteers skilled in the identification of plants, animals, natural
The g als f this eve t e e f u ‐f ld: (1) t b i g expe ts t a u de ‐studied area to collect
information to build the case for conservation land acquisition (2) t fu the test “bioblitzi g” ith
scie tists as a apid‐ esp se high etu ‐ ‐i vestme t meth d f the c llecti f high‐quality
su vey data (3) t build a c llegial c mmu ity f dese t‐i te ested scientists that could be called
17
reliable field-based information, and (4) to bring attention to, and increase the constituency for, an
Twenty-one volunteer experts participated in the event, and 194 taxa were recorded (Table 3 and
Fig. 1). Discoveries of new populations and ecological interactions provided conservation-relevant
information and evidence of expanded research capacity. In addition, 12 new archaeological sites
were recorded during this event (Table 2). To our knowledge, the Chicago Valley event represents
the first example of the inclusion of environmental archaeology during a bioblitz. One month later,
NPS held an archaeologically-f cused “A chae litz” eve t f middle sch l child e at the K ife
River Indian Villages in North Dakota (NPS 2017). The identification and assessment of archaeological
sites during an expert bioblitz can inform managers and conservation practitioners of past human
presence and activities at the site, and may serve to enhance overall conservation potential. Plant
and animal remains recorded at archaeological sites can provide critical information concerning the
past presence of extirpated or protected species and changing species compositions through time
(Lyman 2006; Lyman and Cannon 2004; Wolverton and Lyman 2012). As a caution, organizers should
be aware that archaeological site locations constitute sensitive information, so best practices (King
Ultimately, information gathered in this event rekindled an interest in protecting, through fee
acquisition, the privately-owned lands in Chicago Valley. The conservation values of the property are
18
now well understood and can easily be used to justify its purchase for conservation if the land-owner
The Amargosa River and associated wetlands contain one of the most impressive suites of endemic,
isolated, and imperiled species in the world. Since the early 1970s, TNC, the Bureau of Land
Management (BLM), and the Amargosa Conservancy have partnered to protect the biodiversity in
the watershed through a combination of land acquisition, restoration, scientific study, and
conservation-focused land management. In 2009, the United States Congress designated the
California portion of the river that flows above ground year-round as Wild and Scenic. TNC and BLM
co-organized a 48-hour expert bioblitz timed to occur 45 years after multi-taxa surveys conducted in
1972. The goals for this event were similar to those for the Chicago Valley Bio-Archaeo-Blitz.
Thirty-six volunteer experts participated in the event, and 378 taxa were recorded (Table 3 and Fig.
1). Travel costs incurred by participants were reimbursed by TNC at a cost of less than $10,000; a
similar effort by contracted surveyors would have greatly exceed this amount (Table 4). Compared
to the 1972 surveys, botanists documented 74 additional plant taxa in 2017. This may be because
the expert bioblitz was conducted at the peak season for annuals in the relatively wet spring of 2017,
whereas surveys in 1972 were conducted in a dry year, and few annuals were observed.
19
Ultimately, this event catalyzed conservation by reinvigorating the relationship between TNC and
the BLM, a partnership that has been a key to conservation success in this landscape over the past
40 years. As the BLM moves forward with management of the Wild and Scenic Amargosa River, they
do so with the knowledge gained from this expert bioblitz event, and with the interest and
engagement of several researchers who have participated in both the Chicago Valley and Amargosa
Expert BioBlitzes. Discoveries made during this event, including fly species new to science and new
ecological interactions, helped to inform and catalyze additional focused studies, including a more
detailed survey of Amargosa River springsnails by BLM and partners (Table 2). The event also
Santa Cruz Island is nearly 250 square km in size with two parallel mountain ranges reaching over
825 m in height. Twenty-four percent of the island is managed by NPS; the other 76% is owned and
managed by TNC as a preserve. The island is home to eight endemic plant taxa (Junak et al. 1995)
and nine federally endangered or threatened plants. After 40 years of active conservation
management and nearly 170 years of habitat degradation, the island was finally free of introduced
mainland vertebrates in 2006. Non-native Argentine ants and 32 invasive plant species are in the
final phase of eradication. With high priority threats abated, island managers are focusing
biodiversity lost due to invasive herbivores and historic land management practices.
20
In 2015, TNC began hosting annual rare plant treasure hunts to find new populations of listed plant
taxa, and hopefully rediscover taxa that are presumed extirpated or extinct. Approximately ten
volunteers with taxa-specific experience are invited to conduct targeted surveys once a month from
February to June over a three-day period. Treasure hunts resulted in surveys conducted 12 times
faster and at half the cost of using contractual labor for the same work.
To date, we have documented 15 new occurrences of two federally threatened plant species,
documented two new species for the island, and recorded dozens of occurrences of many other rare
plants. Surveys that did not yield localities of target species are also important as they inform land
managers of the timing of emergence in the case of annual plants known to occur in the area, or
highlight what has been lost. These efforts have also resulted in development of a database to house
rare plant data, including data from treasure hunts on other islands. Through these treasure hunts,
we gained a greater understanding of endemic taxa throughout their range and can better prioritize
which taxa need conservation intervention, and which ones have recovered and may be proposed
for down- or de-listing under state and federal endangered species acts.
Conclusion
We have developed a basic framework for adapting the bioblitz model to meet the needs of
conservation. Our expert bioblitzes and other field survey efforts involving expert, volunteer
21
researchers have succeeded in generating conservation-relevant data, augmenting research
capacity, and building conservation partnerships. As research and conservation funding becomes
increasingly limited, the interest generated in key natural resources among research institutions and
researchers who are dedicated to contributing to the conservation of species and communities.
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Acknowledgments
28
We thank our agency partners at the Bureau of Land Management, particularly C. Otahal, who
provided helpful comments on an early draft of this manuscript. We also thank the Tejon Ranch
Conservancy for initiating and organizing components of the Tehachapi BioBlitz, and the Amargosa
Conservancy for co-hosting the Chicago Valley Bio-Archaeo-Blitz. We are grateful to private land-
owners B. Brown of China Ranch and S. Sorrells of Shoshone Village, for hosting expert bioblitz
volunteers on their property. Finally, we recognize the volunteer contributions of scientists and
Table 1. Comparison of the methodologies developed around the world for the rapid, field-based
assessment of biodiversity for conservation.
Conserva Where
Metho Participa Durati Approa tion deploy Commen Citatio
d Scale Purpose nts on ch Costs* outcomes ed? ts ns
Rapid Medium Document Taxonomi Weeks Heavy High Designatio South & Begun in Mucho
Ecologic (landsca biodiversity c experts to fieldwor depend n of new Central 1988 by ny et
al pe scale) in with Month k with ing on protected America, TNC – al.
Assessm threatened strategic s some location areas Caribbea primarily 1991;
ent landscapes partners prelimin n, Africa, in Sayre
ary Asia countries et al.
spatial Pacific where 1999;
analysis Natural Donnel
Heritage- ly et al.
type data 2003
do not
exist
Rapid Medium Document Taxonomi Weeks Heavy Modera Designatio South Begun in Abate
Assessm (landsca biodiversity c experts to fieldwor te n of new America, 1992 by 1992
ent pe scale) in only Month k with depend protected Africa, Conservati
Program to Large threatened s prelimin ing on areas and Southea on
(regional landscapes ary amount NGO st Asia Internatio
scale) and spatial of field programm nal–
recommend analysis time atic mostly in
priority priorities South
actions America
29
BioRAP Small Synthesize Spatial Month Usually Low – Identificati Australia CSIRO Margul
(site existing analysts, s no Modera on and , Papua version of es &
specific) data, modelers, fieldwor te prioritizati New RAP Redhea
to including geograph k– on of Guinea emphasizi d 1995;
Medium socio- ers almost conservati ng Faith et
(landsca economic exclusive on areas analyses al.
pe scale) factors, into ly GIS/ needed to of 2001
spatially compute meet total available
explicit r-based area target imagery
hotspots for exercise (e.g. 10% data and
conservatio of whole de-
n action country) emphasizi
ng
fieldwork
Rapid Small Document Taxonomi One Heavy High Identificati Cuba, Field Hayden
Biologic (site biodiversity c experts Month fieldwor ($300K) on of and Museum 2007
al specific) in only k with important upper version of
Inventor to threatened prelimin biological Amazon RAP
y (RBI) Medium landscapes ary communiti and emphasizi
(landsca and spatial es and Andean ng
pe scale) recommend analysis determinat foothills fieldwork
priority ion regions
actions whether of
they are Ecuador,
outstandin Peru and
g in a Bolivia
regional or
global
context
All Taxa Small Document Taxonomi 5-10 Fieldwor High Identificati Great Complete Janzen
Biodiver (site all species c experts Years k on of all Smoky biodiversit and
sity specific) on site and followed species Mountai y Hallwa
Inventor to citizen by lab- within a ns inventory chs
y (ATBI) Medium scientists based protected National 1994
(landsca specime area Park and
pe scale) n ID Costa
Rica
Ecoregio Very Identify In-house 18–24 Targeted High Identificati USA, TNC Groves
nal large conservatio staff, Month fieldwor ($150– on of Africa, product to et al.
Assessm (ecoregio n priority expert s k to 300K) landscape- Indonesi implemen 1995;
ent nal scale) landscapes/ input via groundtr scale a, Papua t larger Randall
sites within workshop uth after priorities New scale et al.
an s spatial for Guinea, focus of 2010
ecoregion analysis conservati Asia 1995
on Pacific “C se va
investment region tion by
Desig ”
30
Expert Small Determine Taxonomi Days Primarily Low** Document To date, Arose in Graf et
BioBlitz (site biodiversity c experts, fieldwor (<$10,0 the mostly 2000’s t al.
specific) of partners, k, with 00) biodiversit USA, fill need 2017;
threatened sometime aid of y at sites Albania, for more and
site or s citizen spatial where Mexico site- see
triage scientists info conservati specific Table 2
conservatio on action biodiversit
n could be y
opportunity deployed assessmen
to abate ts
threats
*Costs are estimated from references or inferred from duration and participants, and fall into three
categories: Low (<$10,000); Moderate (<$100,000); High (>$100,000)
** reimbursement for time contributed by volunteer participants was not included in the calculation of cost
for this method (see Table 4)
Table 2. Summary of Conservation Outcomes from four rapid survey events involving The Nature
Conservancy (TNC), the United States Bureau of Land Management (BLM), the Natural History
Museum of Los Angeles County (NHMLA), the Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden (RSABG), the Tejon
31
Populations of
invasive plant
species were
identified to help
guide management
action
Mojave ● Biological and ● Very few records for Relationship between
Desert I: archaeological this property existed NHMLA, RSABG, TNC, and
Chicago records generated prior to the expert Amargosa Conservancy
Valley Bio- during this event can bioblitz enhanced
Archaeo- be used to justify the ● Discovery of novel
Blitz purchase of this plant associations for
(2016) property for the Desert Night Lizard,
conservation likely related to dense
● Discovery of mesquite bosques
established ● Documented four
populations of a previously
nonnative gecko and undocumented rare
frog, and the plant populations of
documented recent two species (Pahrump
arrival of Western orache and forked
Toads in an adjacent buckwheat) on alkaline
townsite, showcase flats
threats associated ● Discovery of previously
with nearby undocumented
urbanization nonnative species at an
adjacent townsite
32
including the
Mediterranean House
Gecko, which is the
second population
record for the county,
and the American
Bullfrog
● Discovery of a
previously
undocumented
population of Western
Toads at an adjacent
spring complex
● Mapping of 13
archaeological sites, 12
of which were
previously
undocumented
33
Mojave ● New occurrences of ● Very few records for Relationship between
Desert II: rare plants recorded arthropods existed for BLM and TNC enhanced
Amargosa in "hanging gardens", this part of the Wild
River a rare wetland and Scenic River prior
Expert habitat, directly to the expert bioblitz;
BioBlitz inform the many records for other
(2017) generation of the taxa were decades old
Amargosa Wild and ● Documentation of the
Scenic River Plan rare, phylogenetically
● Presence of important fly family
springsnails Apsilocephalidae
reconfirmed within ● Discovery of at least 4
Wild and Scenic fly species new to
River, allowing for science, including one
follow-up BLM that is likely a new
management actions genus
● Photo-documentation
of a previously
unknown association
of mites on Pheidole
ant larvae
● Documented the
ranges of three species
of toads in the area,
including a recently
discovered population
fW dh use’s T ad
34
Santa Cruz ● 15 new occurrences ● New occurrences of Relationships started
Island of two federally listed species can now with four research
Rare Plant threatened plant be used to model institutions, existing
Treasure species. 2 new habitat preferences of relationships enhanced
Hunt species recorded for rare listed species with nine entities, and
(2015– the island. Nearly 35 engagement with a
2017) rare plant species regulatory agency
recorded.
iNaturalist Project Sites for these events include:
35
Mojave Desert II: Amargosa River Expert BioBlitz (2017): https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/2017-
amargosa-river-bioblitz
Tehachapi
Mountains
Fungi 8 2 1
Arthropods 69 81 154
Mollusks 0 0 2
Fish 0 0 3
Amphibians 2 0 5
Reptiles 6 4 9
Birds 81 35 66
36
Mammals 9 4 16
Table 4. Cost comparison for rapid field surveys conducted via expert bioblitz vs. contractual labor.
Costs are based on the Amargosa River Expert BioBlitz event hosted by The Nature Conservancy in
2017, which involved the participation of 35 experts and one host individual over a 48-hour period.
All figures in US dollars. A rate of $75.00/hr was used for estimating labor costs.
Airfare 1,373 -
Airport Parking 36 -
Supplies 26 300
Labor
37
Field Work - 43,200
38
Figure 1. Maps of occurrence data added to iNaturalist during the Mojave Desert Expert BioBlitzes in
(A) Chicago Valley as conducted in April 2016 and (B) Amargosa River in April 2017, as compared to
pre-existing occurrence data in the iNaturalist database (left panel). Note: 10 observations (9
species) shown for Amargosa River prior to 2017 were collected immediately after the 2016 Chicago
Valley Expert BioBlitz by participants from that event. The numbers of species observed during the
expert bioblitzes (A and B, right panels) differ from those reported in Table 3 because the values
39