Community Science and Native Plant Monitoring (Hardcover) by Kyle Lee on MixCache.com
🎉 New to MixCache.com? Sign up now and get $5.00 FREE CREDIT towards any ebook purchase!* Create Account →

Community Science and Native Plant Monitoring MTA
How to organize, run, and contribute to citizen science projects documenting native plant populations

Book Details
5 ratings · Read ratings & reviews
Log in to purchase and rate this book.
About this book:
Community Science and Native Plant Monitoring

This book, "Community Science and Native Plant Monitoring," serves as a comprehensive guide for organizing, running, and contributing to citizen science projects focused on documenting native plant populations. It emphasizes that while native plants are vital to ecosystems and cultural traditions, they face unprecedented pressures from climate change, habitat loss, and invasive species. Community science offers a practical, scalable, and equitable solution to monitor these populations by leveraging volunteer observations guided by sound protocols.

The book delves into the foundational principles of effective monitoring, starting with the ecological understanding of native plant populations, including concepts like population dynamics, life history, seed banks, habitat, and the role of disturbance. It then moves into the critical design phase, stressing the importance of clear, purpose-driven goals and SMART (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound) objectives to ensure data collection is meaningful and actionable. Ethical considerations, reciprocity, and building partnerships with Indigenous and local communities are highlighted as paramount, emphasizing respect for traditional knowledge, data sovereignty, and inclusive practices. Legal considerations such as permits, land access, liability, and data licensing are thoroughly discussed to ensure projects operate responsibly and effectively.

Key operational aspects are covered in detail, including strategies for volunteer recruitment and retention, comprehensive training in plant identification focusing on botany basics and diagnostic characters, and essential fieldcraft, safety, and risk management techniques. Various survey protocols are explained, from simple presence/absence surveys and meanders to more rigorous transects, quadrats, and permanent monitoring stations. Dedicated chapters address specialized monitoring techniques like phenology tracking and reproductive metrics, and specific protocols for special status taxa (rare, endemic, and threatened species). The book also provides in-depth guidance on data management, covering standards, metadata, controlled vocabularies, and the use of technology like GPS, mobile apps, and photographic vouchering, along with exploring various data platforms such as iNaturalist and GBIF.

Finally, the book focuses on translating observations into tangible conservation action. It outlines how to make sense of collected data through basic analysis and visualization, communicate findings effectively through reports, dashboards, and storytelling, and apply these insights to conservation planning and prioritization. The importance of equity, inclusion, and accessibility throughout the entire project lifecycle is a recurring theme. The text also covers securing funding through budgets, grants, and partnerships, and concludes with the crucial process of evaluating impact and practicing adaptive management to ensure projects are continuously learning and improving. The inclusion of case studies, templates, and ready-to-use protocols aims to provide practical, adaptable tools for readers to implement their own native plant monitoring initiatives.

What You'll Find Inside:
  • Community science leverages volunteer observations to fill spatial and temporal gaps in native plant monitoring, turning curiosity into actionable data.
  • Successful projects begin with clear goals and SMART objectives that drive protocol selection, data consistency, and measurable outcomes.
  • Ethical practice requires reciprocity, partnerships with Indigenous and local communities, and respect for data sovereignty and benefit‑sharing.
  • Robust data standards, metadata, and controlled vocabularies ensure observations are comparable, reusable, and trustworthy across platforms.
  • A toolkit of field methods—presence/absence surveys, meanders, transects, quadrats, permanent plots, and phenology tracking—lets projects match techniques to their monitoring objectives.
Who's It For:

This book is for nonprofit leaders launching community‑science programs, educators weaving field experiences into curricula, and citizen scientists eager to deepen their impact; it also serves land managers, conservation agencies, and Indigenous partners who need reliable, ethically grounded data to inform management and policy.

Author:

Kyle Lee

Published By:

MixCache.com


Date Published:

May 5, 2026

Language:

English

Word Count:

57,598 words

Reading Time:

4 hours 2 minutes

Sample:

Read Sample


🎁 Includes the ebook FREE
Read instantly while you wait for your hardcover to arrive — no extra charge.
🚚 FREE Shipping in the USA
$7 flat rate per book to all other countries
Order:

Click to order this hardcover:

Buy Now
Ebook included · Print made to order Secure Payment

Print copy is made to order and ships worldwide. Includes the ebook free, ready to read instantly.


$5 account credit for all new MixCache.com accounts, usable toward any ebook purchase!*

Ratings & Reviews

5 ratings