Doing citizen science in sensational salt marshes

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DOING CITIZEN SCIENCE IN SENSATIONAL SALT MARSHES AND OTHER BLUE CARBON HABITATS DAWN BAZELY

Transcript of Doing citizen science in sensational salt marshes

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D O I N G C I T I Z E N S C I E N C E I N S E N S AT I O N A L S A LT M A R S H E S A N D O T H E R B L U E C A R B O N H A B I TAT S

D A W N B A Z E LY

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– A B O U T S A LT M A R S H E S

Hudson Bay Salt Marshes

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– F R E D C O O K E , P R O F E S S O R E M E R I T U S Q U E E N S U N I V E R S I T Y

Salt Marsh in Norfolk, East Anglia

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B L U E C A R B O N

• photosynthesis

• what drives life is… a little current, kept up by the sunshine”

• Albert Szent-Györgi (Noble Prize in Physiology)

• the NOBEL.ORG website is FABULOUS

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B L U E C A R B O N

• Blue carbon —

• the long term storage of carbon in plant habitats growing in coastal lands and near-shore marine environments

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C E C . O R G

• COMMISSION FOR ENVIRONMENTAL COOPERATION

• CHMURA ET AL. 2016

• NAFTA (CAN-US-MEX)

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T H E M A R S H R I V E R AT L A P É R O U S E B AY, H U D S O N B AY

• Estuary

• Inter-tidal

• Water has lower salinity levels than the ocean

• Salinity gradients

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Less salty

More salty

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S T. L A W R E N C E R I V E R & T H E G U L F O F S T. L A W R E N C E

- M A N Y O F T H E S A M E S P E C I E S A S I N O T H E R S A LT M A R S H E S - B U T W E D O N ’ T J U S T S E E S A LT M A R S H E S

B E Y O N D T H I S E S T U A R Y

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Anticosti Island

Nova Scotia

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I ’ M A L S O A C I T I Z E N S C I E N T I S TI ’ M A P R O F E S S O R I N A FA C U LT Y O F S C I E N C E , A N D

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– E R I C L A R S O N , “ W H AT I S C I T I Z E N S C I E N C E ? ” M A S H A B L E . C O M

“anybody who voluntarily contributes his or her time and resources toward scientific research in

partnership with professional scientists”

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– B T W, I T ’ S N O T A N E W I D E A , J U S T A N E W - I S H N A M E

“Why Citizen Science?”

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CouncilofCanadianAcademiesreport:ScienceCulture:WhereCanadaStands2014h9p://www.scienceadvice.ca/en/assessments/completed/science-culture.aspx

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– S C I S TA R T E R . C O M

“Science we can do together.”

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– F R O M M A N G R O V E W AT C H . O R G

Mangrove Citizen Science

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M A N G R O V E S - W A R M E R C O A S TA L & E S T U A R I N E Z O N E S

• global distribution

• protect shorelines

• important habitat

• are disappearing

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– D I S A P P E A R I N G AT T H E R AT E O F 2 % P E R Y E A R

“Mangroves - the kidneys of the coast.”

By ChandraGiri - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=18319881

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– I N G R E D I E N T S

🤓 professional scientist(s) "# interested citizens 🔬a research project e.g. long-running snow goose study on Hudson Bay involved dozens of volunteer citizen scientists… including members of this 1981 banding crew

The recipe for doing salt marsh citizen science

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R E C I P E F O R D O I N G S A LT M A R S H C I T I Z E N S C I E N C E

• Ingredients:

• professional scientist(s)

• interested citizens

• a research project…

• I HAVE ONE!

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St Kilda Archipelago

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St. Kilda is a UN World Heritage Site:geology, archaeology and seabirds

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Evacuated in 1930 due to the isolation and squalid conditions of the small population - life was hard and unsustainable

http://www.kilda.org.uk/cultural-traditions.htm

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Soay sheep - a feral, unmanaged crashing population (always) with no predators

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– B Y I A N C A L D W E L L - O W N W O R K , C C B Y 2 . 5 , H T T P S : / /C O M M O N S . W I K I M E D I A . O R G / W / I N D E X . P H P ? C U R I D = 1 7 4 1 5 4 2

On the most northern Orkney Island, North Ronaldsay, sheep feed mainly on seaweed

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By Fred Hsu (Wikipedia:User:Fredhsu on en.wikipedia) - Photo taken and uploaded by user, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=1559678

By Maximilian Dörrbecker (Chumwa) - Own work using this map: Robert S. Steneck, Michael H. Graham et al: Kelp forest ecosystems - biodiversity, stability, resilience and future. In:

Environmental Conservation 29 (4), p. 436–459, CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=14541999

By Hannah Robinson, Attribution, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=4091858

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My fungal endophyte project

Some of this grass has a microscopic fungus living inside it — a symbiont — that makes poisons to defend the grass against the sheep

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“St. Brianan sheep grazed grass had higher endophyte infection, when

inspected visually.”

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Lots of grasses have endophytic fungi

fungi evolved from pathogenic or disease-causing ancestors

these endophytes live entirely in the host grasses

are systemic Schardl et al. 2004. Symbioses of grasses with seedborne fungal endophytes. Ann. Rev. Plant. Biol.

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Epichloë festucae - part of an evolutionary continuum

Left flower

has external, spore-producing stromata (HORIZONTAL transmission)

Right flower

regular flowers transmit fungal hyphae via the seeds, and their seedlings (VERTICAL transmission) Picture from Schardl website: http://www.ca.uky.edu/agcollege/plantpathology/schardl/schardl.htm

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S Y M P T O M L E S S E N D O P H Y T E S O F F E S C U E G R A S S S P E C I E S

The life cycle has vertical transmission

Images either D. Bazely or Wikimedia

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Herbivore

Grass Fungus

?

🌾🐑

🐑🍄

🌾🍄

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Endophytes make alkaloids

Ergot & other alkaloids have lethal and sub-lethal effects on the herbivores of the endophyte’s host grasses

Ref: Schardl et al’s Alkaloid-Making Fungal Symbionts essay for Plant Physiology 5th ed. Online.

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Why? It’s the Ecology & Evolution of the Interaction

Are these endophytic fungi mutualists or parasites? It depends on the situation Conceptual model: Nora Saona

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S O U R C E : W I K I M E D I A — R E D F E S C U E , F E S T U C A R U B R A

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O L D F E R R Y H O U S E , M U L L , S C O T L A N D

• 100% of tillers of Festuca rubra sampled in the field had the endophyte!

• Compared with 0-60% infection elsewhere in Wales and Mull, Scotland

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When possible, I try to expand the dataset showing the presence of fungal endophytes in red fescue grass

the green line shows where we previously sampled red fescue grass

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A B O U T P E R M I T S & W H E R E Y O U C A N S A M P L E … U N I V E R S I T Y R E S E A R C H E R S A R E G O V E R N E D B Y L A R G E S E T S O F T R I - C O U N C I L G U I D E L I N E S …

I W I L L B E R E G I S T E R I N G T H I S C I T I Z E N S C I E N C E P R O J E C T O N T H E O C C U R R E N C E O F F U N G A L E N D O P H Y T E S I N F E S T U C A R U B R A G R A S S , W I T H VA R I O U S W E B S I T E S & B E C L A R I F Y I N G H O W B E S T P E O P L E C A N S E N D U S D R I E D S H O O T S O F T H I S G R A S S F O R T E S T I N G

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T H E S E D ATA A R E M A D E P U B L I C LY AVA I L A B L E : T H AT ’ S O P E N S C I E N C E ! S E E Y O R K S PA C E , A N I N S T I T U T I O N A L R E P O S I T O R Y

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T H E O P E N A C C E S S D I G I TA L W O R L D

• is opening up new research findings…

• …like rediscovering the rare plant, Braya pilosa, from locations described in old notebooks

• …read about the Smithsonian field book project (http://naturalhistory.si.edu/rc/

fieldbooks/)