State of India’s Birds 2023: A framework to leverage semi-structured citizen science for bird conservation

Kavli Affiliate: V. S. Ramachandran

| Authors: Ashwin Viswanathan, Karthik Thrikkadeeri, Pradeep Koulgi, Praveen J, Arpit Deomurari, Ashish Jha, Ashwin Warudkar, Kulbhushansingh Suryawanshi, MD Madhusudan, Monica Kaushik, Naman Goyal, Priti bangal, Rajah Jayapal, Suhel Quader, Sutirtha Dutta, Tarun Menon and Vivek Ramachandran

| Summary:

Birds and their habitats are threatened with extinction around the world. Regional assessments of the ‘State of Birds’ are a vital means to prioritize data-driven conservation action by informing national and global policy. Such evaluations have traditionally relied on data derived from extensive, long-term, systematic surveys that require significant resources, limiting their feasibility to a few regions in the world. In the absence of such ‘structured’ long-term datasets, ‘semi-structured’ datasets have recently emerged as a promising alternative in other regions around the world. Semi-structured data are generated and uploaded by birdwatchers to citizen science platforms like eBird. Such data contain inherent biases because birdwatchers are not required to adhere to a fixed protocol. An evaluation of the status of birds from semi-structured data is therefore a difficult task that requires careful curation of data and the use of robust statistical methods to reduce errors and biases. In this paper, we present a methodology that was developed for this purpose, and was applied to produce the comprehensive State of India’s Birds (SoIB) 2023 report. SoIB 2023 assessed the status of 942 bird species in India by evaluating each species based on three metrics: 1) long-term change: change in abundance between the year 2022 and the year-interval pre-2000; 2) current annual trend: mean annual change in abundance from 2015 to 2022; and 3) distribution range size. We found evidence that 204 species have declined in the long term, and 142 species are currently declining. We present and discuss important insights about India’s birds that can guide research and conservation action in the region. We hope that the detailed methodology described here can act as a blueprint to produce State of Birds assessments from semi-structured citizen science datasets and springboard conservation action in many other regions where structured data is lacking but strong communities of birders exist.

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