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Download "25 AÑOS DEL PROGRAMA SACRE"

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Video tags

SEO/BirdLife
BirdLife
Ornitología
pajareo
aves
medioambiente
ecología
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00:01:31
and I speak, I'm waiting for an angle rating.
00:01:41
Hello, good morning to all the
00:01:45
attendees. Thank you for your presence
00:01:47
and we hope to make you have a
00:01:51
pleasant time. This matter is a matter
00:01:53
that we believe contributes
00:01:55
a lot to society. Let's see if we
00:01:58
can all enjoy it. To say first of all that
00:02:00
this event will be recorded and available
00:02:03
on YouTube, I wanted to highlight it not only
00:02:05
for legal reasons but
00:02:07
especially because so that the entire
00:02:10
country that can thus be used by
00:02:13
many more people than those who will be
00:02:14
present in the two minutes
00:02:17
are many people. In the mornings
00:02:20
we work and we cannot dedicate time
00:02:21
to these matters but it will be available
00:02:23
on YouTube and we hope that our
00:02:26
talks and our interventions will be
00:02:29
used by many more people than we
00:02:30
have this morning live
00:02:33
and well, as you all know, the
00:02:37
bird monitoring program common
00:02:38
breeding birds that like the massacre
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but
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it is an international initiative that has been
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developing for decades in
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numerous countries around us, as
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we will see a little later with one
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of the interveners within seo
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birdlife, the program has taken a
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very prominent place,
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you know that we want quite a few programs
00:03:09
of monitoring in progress 12 or 13 because they
00:03:13
are not active inactive depending
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on the seasons and the years but
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within all these programs sacre
00:03:21
has a very prominent place because it
00:03:23
provides very very
00:03:25
important information and as will be reflected in
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the next interventions.
00:03:31
You will see what it contributes a lot
00:03:34
to the international national autonomous scales
00:03:39
and outside of these scales because also to
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scientific and mathematical habitat scales
00:03:46
etc.
00:03:48
For this we are going to have seven
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people who will contribute with
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a brief presentation different aspects
00:03:55
and different utilities that facilitate The
00:03:58
information generated by the
00:03:59
[Music] program
00:04:01
must first enter Ramón Martín,
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director of institutional development at
00:04:07
Silverlight, and what he will tell us upon the
00:04:10
arrival of the program, Spain is created, because
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no one like him knows it in all its
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terms because the responsibility falls on him.
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when this
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monitoring program arrived in Spain and
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will tell us how why and for what
00:04:27
next maite ep the coordinator
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of the citizen science observatory
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in Spain within the foundation and
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dibert and see if you live
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give us a few glimpses of the
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current situation of citizen science in spain is
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an aspect that could take a few
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hours of presentation but that will surely
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summarize the few minutes
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below virginia escandell is the
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coordinator of the program. It has been created at the
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state level within seo and it
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responds to the very specific aspect that is the
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participation the evolution of the
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participants the general results
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of this monitoring program after
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these 25 years of development thereof
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below gorka belamendia as a
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worker at the environmental studies center
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of the vitoria
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gasteiz city council will tell us about his experience as a
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seo/birdlife partner and collaborator in
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these 25 years of experience is acre and
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the support for our organization
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we will later have an
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international vision of this type of
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bird monitoring by ella
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pasquet member of the board of directors
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of the European bird census
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bcc conflict in the position of communicator of the
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entity and also responsible for the
00:05:45
department of studies for the time of
00:05:48
seeing line belgica will explain to us the
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monitoring of common birds in Europe and
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its contributions to that scale
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below beatriz brook and that this
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the truth is that yes and I will tell you about the
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institute of hunting resources of
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castile la Mancha will provide information
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on the importance of the data for
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the type of problems acre for
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science and scientific publications
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contributions or limitations and will already
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explain many aspects in this sense
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and finally pablo vera coordinator of the
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monitoring program of The
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Valencia office of SEO Birdlife will explain to us what
00:06:28
the blood program and other
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monitoring programs contribute to the work in
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SEO conservation. At the end there will be
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a question time. You can
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write down all your questions in the
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chat that you have available and we
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will write them down. and we will be
00:06:45
waiting so that in the end we will
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mention you one by one and see if,
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among all the interveners, we can
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give answers to all our
00:06:53
questions,
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so for my part I have little more to
00:06:58
say to you and if you think so, then it's already happened
00:07:02
to Ramón Martín to Thank you very much,
00:07:11
thank you very much,
00:07:15
thank you to all the people who
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joined us in this celebration. We
00:07:21
cannot forget that it is our
00:07:23
birthday, we are celebrating, and
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it is a source of satisfaction to be able to
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meet with all of you.
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I want to start. for welcoming you
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on behalf of our board of directors,
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our director and the entire
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organization to this seminar, to this
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celebration, but I would even say more, I
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would also dare to thank you
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for participating on behalf of so
00:07:52
many collaborators in the sacred before
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these years from
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state and regional administrations, universities,
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other research centers from other
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groups or mythological groups, other NGOs that have
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actively collaborated in the sacre
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and even more so, I would also dare to thank you
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on behalf of all the
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field volunteers who are the
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true essence of projects of this type and
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team and I dare to do it on behalf
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of everyone because we can say that the
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Sacre belongs to everyone, which is a
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consolidated project widely implemented in
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Spain that also has, as we will see
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later, an international trajectory and
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is here to thank the
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other speakers who join us and in
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that sense the one
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who seo birdlife will be involved in a
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project like this had as its almost
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final objective that it could be useful to
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society, citizens by facilitating
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voluntary participation but also to the
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rest of the community
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administration scientist ultimately thinking
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of having better information to
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guide verification strategies
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like the rest of my colleagues. I will
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detail this in detail:
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that is the common component,
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that almost common property of the sacred program
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responds to a large extent
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to the futuristic vision of Francisco
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Bernís. founder of the
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Spanish mythology society, when he spoke about
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the need to have battalions
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of field ornithologists, he did not now
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highlight the importance of the mythology
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of alpargata, as he said, not the
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basic mythology to generate
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from there useful information for to know
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our power better, in short, to
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better guide the conservation strategy
00:09:45
then we talked about espadrille ornithology
00:09:47
and today we talk about citizen science
00:09:50
the trajectory of the transition of the term
00:09:53
has led to this one that we use
00:09:56
today but which is largely based on
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those pioneering initiatives of desire,
00:10:01
mobilizing from the beginning its
00:10:02
foundation and beforehand the numerous
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field ornithologists to generate that information
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well, I insist we are celebrating
00:10:12
25 years of the blood program of our
00:10:15
program, the monitoring of common birds is believed
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and after all the time it
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can be interesting or curious
00:10:24
to reflect a little on the origins,
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not as it does, as Juan Carlos has pointed out, I
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am going to give you some very brief touches
00:10:33
on why, when and how
00:10:35
the blood emerged, although you have enough information
00:10:39
in other sources in the bulletin that is
00:10:44
prepared annually and that
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an extraordinary number has been published that you
00:10:48
have available can be consulted shortly
00:10:51
but I want to give you a bit of that
00:10:53
personal vision of someone who lived it
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very closely, as Juan Carlos says, I
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would dare to point out the year 1986 as the
00:11:03
beginning of
00:11:04
The entire Spanish Society of Ornithology
00:11:06
until that date was an
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organization closed by stands and
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to say the least, closed and very limited to
00:11:13
a university environment and a few
00:11:15
fans of psychology at that time did not
00:11:17
have that copla projection that it has
00:11:19
now and he
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and in that sense in that year hundreds of
00:11:25
six society created its policy for
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the protection of birds of passage armed
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with zero they could predict what and that's where
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the change really began the change of course
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the change of benefits it is clear that
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there was pop years later to the generation of
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blood from a common bird monitoring program
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in that year
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the actor already intervened the other
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main actor in all this which is the rsv the
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partner the united kingdom - truly
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international that greatly supported
00:11:56
grooming in those times
00:12:01
a few years later we are Speaking of
00:12:03
1994-95, let's
00:12:06
say formal conversations began to guide the
00:12:09
creation of a serve and it arose from the
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double interest of both seo and
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reception. Obviously, a
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vision of the future was obtained, a long-
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term vision, a strategic vision
00:12:19
made us identify how very necessary
00:12:22
to have something that
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the Anglo-Saxons already had and that made us
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healthy envy then of seeing decades of
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bird monitoring because we needed to
00:12:31
have something like that now insists on
00:12:33
better guiding both our
00:12:34
strategies and our
00:12:37
subsequent conservation actions but also The
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SSP had a similar interest because
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its pension and insurance also
00:12:44
contributed to ensuring the conservation of
00:12:45
its birds in the Mediterranean environments
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where they spent the winter. Then they
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also supported the initiative in other
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European and African countries, but with the
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intention of promoting the program.
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monitoring of common birds in the
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Mediterranean and
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especially intensified the relationship with seo and we
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began to work in the years 94 and 95
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on the design of the strategy in
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the assessment of the possibilities of the
00:13:11
situation. Our situation was very
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different then so did it. was that of
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the society as a whole, we did not obtain a
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little more than 4,000 partners and
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we did not reach 8 people hired.
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No, that also represented an
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important limitation when trying to
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ensure general coverage in the
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project.
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There were intense conversations, as I say.
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fpv team headed by
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richard gregory who is still very involved
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today brand of winds in director of
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conservation and colin I lived
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unfortunately died today to see
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laws that laid the technical foundations
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let's say for the methodology of the program
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it is expected that it would occur at all levels
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from its district director to the or
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el rose who was the link let's say with
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us and with a
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fantastic personal relationship
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on the part of seo birdlife eduardo de
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juana and alejandro sánchez were the
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pioneers along with myself from those
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first meetings and joined
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immediately after with Carlos del
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Moral and a little later Virginia to
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take the reins of those bases that
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were laid in collaboration with the RSV
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visits to the United Kingdom or his visits to
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Spain' they consulted that work, that
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methodological design and the time launcher, in
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short, a pilot project in 1996 in
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the area only of Madrid and
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León, evidently in areas where
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we had greater potential,
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possible collaborators from partners
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then in León, post initiatives
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also and previous trajectories of Pancho
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Curro and his research team in La
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Cantera Style
00:14:51
the following year If I remember correctly, 197
00:14:54
was expanded to other areas, always taking
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into account the potential availability of
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members and volunteers in Seville, Valencia
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and Vitoria,
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thus consolidating the design of the
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program that did not yet exist. The
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Wishes Scientific Committee was created in
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2001 and was subsequently submitted to
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its analysis to its validation the
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methodology and there have been several changes
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but then it was done with those
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technical teams and it was launched in 1998 the program
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began to take shape there the trajectory began to take shape
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the difficulties of the cases of covering certain
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geographical areas by lack of volunteers
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but it was
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achieved
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and we can see now 25 years later an
00:15:47
impressive level of participation and technical quality of the project that
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also has, as has been said, the
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salt program that I am known and recognized by
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the administrations, provides information
00:15:59
even of interest for the fulfillment
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of the administrations' own commitments
00:16:02
to the
00:16:14
conservation strategy that is the final objective
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of the promasa program that
00:16:21
we focus on
00:16:25
and that is the
00:16:28
trajectory of, say, its
00:16:31
generation the vicissitudes have been
00:16:32
enormous and parked in the different
00:16:34
exhibitions it will be possible to comment on some
00:16:36
more details a model project of
00:16:38
citizen science today consolidated and
00:16:40
expanded that contributes to generating a
00:16:41
very useful space to better understand
00:16:44
our environment our most
00:16:45
common birds and act in consequence to
00:16:48
better guide its conservation and to
00:16:50
finish as we do not
00:16:52
constantly repeat our
00:16:54
enormous sincere gratitude to the
00:16:57
field volunteers, there are also good examples here
00:16:59
in the list of speakers to the
00:17:01
campus volunteers who are the ones who
00:17:02
really make the sacre possible together
00:17:05
with the coordination teams, analysis
00:17:07
and monitoring in the
00:17:09
organization,
00:17:12
thank you, I insist that 25 years are nothing
00:17:16
like that one said. Let's hope to see soon, I
00:17:18
will have many more years, salsa believes
00:17:19
consolidating and generating more and better
00:17:22
information to better conserve the
00:17:24
closest birds. Thank you very much to all of you.
00:17:27
Thank you very much.
00:17:31
to comment now to maite on the width
00:17:33
from the foundation and see if you can see it is
00:17:36
a general vision of citizen science
00:17:38
for spain forward in white
00:17:48
I am going to
00:17:50
share some slides
00:17:55
and
00:17:57
well first of all congratulations
00:18:02
the presentation of well has seemed
00:18:06
absolutely spectacular and I
00:18:09
would love everyone else is applauding
00:18:11
but you have to talk a little
00:18:13
then
00:18:15
well then I
00:18:18
basically have three messages
00:18:23
the three messages well I want to underline
00:18:26
the place thank you and I want to underline well well you
00:18:30
wanted to see live
00:18:33
this community of ornithologists that you have
00:18:36
always been a citizen I have
00:18:39
loved ornithology field and
00:18:41
espadrille for so many
00:18:45
decades, in particular, it is believed that it has been 25 years,
00:18:48
well, I want to emphasize although
00:18:51
you know it well, but for the most part
00:18:54
I don't know why because we were well
00:18:56
aware of the very important part
00:18:58
that you are in the science system of the
00:19:02
community scientific,
00:19:05
sometimes we talk about amateurs, sometimes
00:19:07
we talk about volunteers and that is very
00:19:10
good, nothing against it and at the same time I want to
00:19:13
emphasize that there is the need to become
00:19:16
aware that birdlife seo is
00:19:20
part of the scientific community in
00:19:21
Spain, not the science system. Well,
00:19:24
after that, the three points that I
00:19:27
wanted to address are well, well, a vision
00:19:32
of financing for citizens very
00:19:34
quickly, rational action in Spain, well,
00:19:37
some impacts without their European context
00:19:41
because it is essential to take into account
00:19:44
that there are no arrivals at all and
00:19:46
Finally, the observatory as a
00:19:49
service, well, we are
00:19:53
always in contact with the entities that
00:19:55
are here and with many others, and well,
00:19:58
I want to remember
00:19:59
our role in providing support to any
00:20:02
citizen entity, so
00:20:05
respect for the first point
00:20:07
regarding citizen science. Well,
00:20:10
it is indeed an expression, it is an expression
00:20:14
in my work together with my
00:20:16
fun colleagues we often realize
00:20:19
that there are people and entities that have been
00:20:21
doing citizenship for years, decades,
00:20:24
but well with other
00:20:26
expressions and
00:20:28
sometimes using expressions in which they
00:20:33
cannot The
00:20:35
awareness that
00:20:37
science is being done is not clear, so I think the most
00:20:40
important thing is the fact that
00:20:42
science is done independently of
00:20:44
the label and at the same time also the
00:20:47
terms because they can be relevant and
00:20:51
then the expression citizen science is
00:20:52
highly discussed. there he presented a
00:20:55
recently published book, it is in
00:20:57
open events because
00:20:59
many people from Spain have also collaborated
00:21:02
from two different entities. I
00:21:06
also want to refer the room to the
00:21:11
third millennium website' heraldo with whom
00:21:14
from the
00:21:17
observatory we also publish these articles
00:21:19
that give an idea of ​​the enormous diversity
00:21:22
of citizen science projects,
00:21:24
so what I want to emphasize is that
00:21:26
the terms sometimes make us fall for
00:21:29
well, well, maybe we know it, but
00:21:32
it is worth reflecting and delving into the
00:21:35
scope that it has. I don't know if there are many
00:21:38
definitions of citizen science. I am not
00:21:40
going to present
00:21:42
any of them, there are many and each one
00:21:44
focuses on an aspect and then the
00:21:49
first chapter of the book of saños
00:21:51
deals with that, so I
00:21:54
like it a lot and I repeat myself, it does, but
00:21:57
I really like bringing the director of the
00:22:00
training and see
00:22:02
dear Francisco Sanz when I have heard him
00:22:06
on different occasions well once he
00:22:08
understands three words people doing
00:22:10
science then of course people well apart from
00:22:14
people we are the people so we people
00:22:16
can be professional scientists or
00:22:18
not and the idea is that both scientists
00:22:21
professionals and non-professionals who do
00:22:24
not earn a salary from science
00:22:27
but from other types of work, because
00:22:28
we can contribute to
00:22:30
citizen science, so well, it is not
00:22:33
easy to define what science is, that is
00:22:35
clear, but what can be accepted
00:22:40
very briefly is that more or less
00:22:44
of the world we agree that in
00:22:46
research because we start from the
00:22:47
observation of the formulation of a
00:22:49
research question of working hypotheses
00:22:52
we collect information empirical data and
00:22:56
the scientific data of particles is not the same
00:22:59
as paleontology or
00:23:01
cosmology so well
00:23:09
we arrive To conclude, we make public
00:23:23
that there is a citizen contribution.
00:23:26
Yesterday I was in a session of a
00:23:28
European project and someone brought this
00:23:31
slide. Well, it tells you a lot about
00:23:33
projects with tributaries where
00:23:34
people, well, maybe
00:23:36
we would only contribute, well, just in quotes,
00:23:39
providing data, then there is projects in
00:23:42
which people can also
00:23:43
develop material methodologies,
00:23:46
they do data analysis, such as
00:23:48
taxonomic classification, software,
00:23:51
whatever, and then there are projects where from
00:23:53
the research question to the
00:23:56
publication of results,
00:23:58
non-professional citizens have been
00:24:00
involved and using, for example,
00:24:02
publications. scientific ones in which they are
00:24:04
co-authors or publications, well, of
00:24:07
another type, more informative, it is more for
00:24:09
all audiences, like those of us who have
00:24:10
been in third level,
00:24:13
so well, now we are going to talk
00:24:16
about centering Zealand in Spain, I simply
00:24:18
want to remember that the foundation and see
00:24:20
if You see that it is a foundation for the
00:24:22
promotion of the city
00:24:24
in Spain and at the same time we carry out
00:24:28
our own citizen science projects,
00:24:30
one of those projects is the
00:24:32
citizen science observatory in
00:24:33
Spain and it is its project, just like other
00:24:36
interested parties,
00:24:38
it is co-financed by The
00:24:40
Spanish Foundation of Science and Technology,
00:24:42
then the difference between the
00:24:44
observatory and having fun is that
00:24:46
we do our own
00:24:48
citizen city science projects for fun, and
00:24:51
the observatory seeks to give
00:24:52
visibility and promote the concept
00:24:55
throughout Spain by making invisibles and
00:24:59
establishing networks among all the
00:25:02
entities initiatives people who
00:25:05
want to dedicate themselves or have been devoting themselves for
00:25:07
decades to citizen science
00:25:09
so a few strokes well the
00:25:11
first thing is that I would invite you to that
00:25:13
you will need the observatory because
00:25:17
there since its launch in 2016
00:25:19
we have already collected almost three hundred
00:25:22
different initiatives and well, further down
00:25:26
this slide he indicated not many more things
00:25:28
to discover and to create, there are
00:25:30
some that have a long history
00:25:35
and then in these four lines what he
00:25:39
indicated is that
00:25:41
apart from the fact that there are decades of history
00:25:43
of citizen action in Spain with
00:25:46
different names
00:25:48
well recently both from
00:25:49
Europe and from European policies
00:25:51
for things that are done today or explain
00:25:53
Juan Carlos very well to Ramón and the
00:25:57
Danza Leal and many others of you
00:25:59
no well that's good well the
00:26:02
institutions realize that
00:26:05
there are very important benefits for
00:26:10
the entire society as a whole and
00:26:12
then since 2008 already in Europe,
00:26:15
well 3rd
00:26:16
there was an awareness that it is
00:26:19
worth promoting this type of initiatives
00:26:22
of course there are enormous debates in
00:26:24
which I am not going to go into and now I
00:26:27
simply want to comment on some
00:26:28
impacts of the catana in Spain and in its
00:26:31
European context so this is an
00:26:34
article that we published at the beginning of
00:26:36
this year because at the observatory
00:26:37
we do research on the
00:26:39
citizen tape in Spain and in its
00:26:42
international context and then well Well, the
00:26:44
analysis of the evolution of
00:26:46
scientific publications that we
00:26:48
have with this article we wanted to point
00:26:51
out that the application of a has a
00:26:54
role in professional academic science, which
00:26:56
is also to say that it
00:26:59
is not that citizen science is
00:27:01
second-class science, far from
00:27:03
it.
00:27:04
Another thing is that there are also many other
00:27:06
publications that are not
00:27:08
academic publications where the
00:27:10
citizen tape must also be seen because it is
00:27:14
for different audiences or readers. It is
00:27:18
good, I simply wanted to show how
00:27:20
recent it is exponentially throughout the world
00:27:22
and on the other hand, the paper that
00:27:26
the citizen in Spain has a
00:27:29
complex topic network that forms
00:27:31
scientific publications through
00:27:33
co-authorship, since Spain has strong
00:27:37
important connections with other countries, it is
00:27:40
seen that the
00:27:41
Anglo-Saxon world predominates and the trajectory of the sun,
00:27:46
Ramón has told us, is very important
00:27:49
and You can get a
00:27:51
thousand
00:27:53
very interesting articles from there, but I'm going forward
00:27:56
here. What I want to say is something that I
00:27:59
have already mentioned, but I want to emphasize
00:28:00
that, for example, in the last
00:28:05
plan, the last strategy in the
00:28:08
fifth technology
00:28:10
proposes science. citizenship as one of
00:28:13
the basic principles four
00:28:15
basic points to support the action
00:28:18
I have only developed of the
00:28:20
four that there is a last paragraph is
00:28:23
developed in the others we do not talk about
00:28:25
co-creation we talk about open access
00:28:27
of values ​​needs
00:28:30
social expectations sales with a language very
00:28:32
close to that of those of the
00:28:35
European Union, so well,
00:28:37
since the sixth framework program,
00:28:39
and since Spanish science has
00:28:45
been present in science in
00:28:48
European research, sometimes there
00:28:52
have been no programs other than to propose
00:28:54
citizen science. within the name
00:28:56
of the call and well there you see
00:28:58
some numbers
00:29:01
28 of the 77 countries
00:29:05
sorry projects in which Spain was
00:29:08
a partner 28 of those countries Spain has
00:29:10
been the leader in very diverse and
00:29:13
diverse topics and there is another
00:29:16
black map well that's good You can
00:29:19
also consult it in the latest report
00:29:21
of the Observatory of Intention in
00:29:23
Spanish. I am going to jump over this slide
00:29:25
very quickly. I just want to say that
00:29:28
the Horizon Europe program
00:29:30
also contemplates participation
00:29:34
in an increasingly
00:29:35
explicit way, which has already been done. since the
00:29:38
constitution of the European
00:29:41
Research Area in the year 2000 but well
00:29:43
from the 20th so that the participation well goes
00:29:47
to
00:29:48
very different reasons that we could
00:29:50
talk about but at the moment well
00:29:53
as I said we can take a walk through
00:29:57
the multiple initiatives on the
00:29:59
platform of very various themes and
00:30:02
methodologies
00:30:05
and well, about the impacts, we
00:30:07
have talked about the scientists, but
00:30:10
of course they are the same inventions
00:30:12
that reflect what the
00:30:14
people who upload your projects to
00:30:16
the observatory's web platform reflect,
00:30:20
so it is clear to us that there is a
00:30:21
political impact and an
00:30:23
environmental impact there is a social impact there is
00:30:25
an educational impact
00:30:26
well many times this occurs all of
00:30:29
them at the same time but well this is what
00:30:31
each of the managers of their
00:30:34
own project says always biodiversity and
00:30:37
ecology and environment biology are
00:30:40
areas Well, they predominate not only
00:30:43
in Spain but throughout the world as a result of
00:30:45
the historical tradition of science and
00:30:48
even together in so many aspects.
00:30:53
Let's see if it is ending
00:30:57
clearly, of course, then it is less
00:31:00
high. There are different impacts that
00:31:02
we analyze the call for species
00:31:04
that already We have commented on it simply, it is to
00:31:06
say that there is a specific line
00:31:09
for three calls to talk about how we
00:31:14
try to give you vision also
00:31:16
through interviews,
00:31:18
you can upload our resources to the
00:31:20
observatory, we hold colloquiums, samples,
00:31:23
many of you participate, well, the
00:31:26
observatory is present in
00:31:28
international networks, the rich It is the
00:31:30
Ibero-American for the jump also this
00:31:33
slide and now to finish without
00:31:36
failing to thank and
00:31:39
congratulate with all my heart to
00:31:41
seo/birdlife for their
00:31:44
enormous work and also for our support in
00:31:47
specific initiatives that we have had
00:31:49
from the observatory in In
00:31:51
a few months, we want to publish in
00:31:53
particular an article related to
00:31:55
the motivations for doing
00:31:57
citizen science and Silverlight was one of the
00:32:00
entities that also supported us
00:32:02
enormously to get
00:32:04
some magnificent answers and well here
00:32:07
I leave it, there is my contact and my apartment
00:32:09
but many thank you from mar grandmother
00:32:13
d
00:32:15
but very interesting presentation because
00:32:19
nothing now virginia is going to tell us
00:32:20
the content of the results blood
00:32:23
again from dancing on foot to make it more
00:32:26
sense to tell jokes speakers from the
00:32:30
previous n
00:32:41
hello good morning everyone I'm going to To share
00:32:44
the presentation,
00:33:02
I imagine that already
00:33:07
well, the program is believed to be the
00:33:09
program of trends in
00:33:11
bird populations in spring, it is a
00:33:16
I can't turn the screen
00:33:20
and it
00:33:24
won't let me turn the screen
00:33:43
there, it also looks very good, let's
00:33:46
see now, well As
00:33:51
20p Lazio and Ramón Martín have already commented on the
00:33:54
importance of citizen science in
00:33:57
this type of monitoring programs,
00:33:59
I also want to emphasize
00:34:03
that volunteers are the
00:34:05
key element for achieving these
00:34:08
programs and that without them we would not have
00:34:11
been Now celebrating 25 years
00:34:13
of this monitoring program and
00:34:16
having the information on
00:34:19
the trends of the
00:34:21
bird collections that we currently have,
00:34:24
in addition to the volunteer participants
00:34:27
who carry out field sampling
00:34:30
and take data from the birds, there is another
00:34:33
team of volunteers, a network of
00:34:37
coordinators who are local to several
00:34:41
provinces and who help us to deal
00:34:44
more closely with the
00:34:46
volunteers to explain the
00:34:48
methodology, how to participate and the
00:34:51
doubts that arise in all the
00:34:53
volunteers because they have a
00:34:54
closeness on the part of these coordinators
00:34:57
apart from the coordination and from the
00:35:00
sober live team,
00:35:03
as you see in the graph, the number of
00:35:06
participants since this
00:35:09
program began has been increasing.
00:35:13
First, it has been a fairly
00:35:15
exponential increase, then it has stabilized and
00:35:18
in recent years years we can count on
00:35:20
around 1,000 volunteers
00:35:23
participating in this program,
00:35:26
some years it has been somewhat
00:35:29
larger but well we can stabilize it
00:35:31
at a thousand people throughout these 25
00:35:34
years there have been almost 3,000
00:35:37
participants who have registered to
00:35:40
participate. and collaborate in the
00:35:45
data collection, these people who
00:35:47
register to participate are people
00:35:50
interested in the environment that
00:35:53
birds have in particular who have
00:35:55
certain knowledge and experience in
00:35:58
the identification of birds and want
00:36:01
to contribute that experience of theirs so that
00:36:08
Consistent data can be obtained from
00:36:13
our bird populations. Some of
00:36:15
these people do not have as much
00:36:16
experience, but we offer them
00:36:18
courses that are carried out by both
00:36:21
the volunteer regional coordinators
00:36:24
and us from the citizen science area
00:36:26
and also from the
00:36:30
area of education of our
00:36:32
organization that carry out
00:36:34
specific courses for sacre programs and other
00:36:38
programs and also introductory courses
00:36:40
in ornithology and
00:36:43
bird song identification things that
00:36:46
help people to have
00:36:48
experiences to be able to participate in
00:36:50
these programs
00:36:52
on the map you can see the
00:36:55
distribution of all those
00:36:58
places where we have
00:37:01
enough information to be able to be analyzed and
00:37:04
included in the analyzes of
00:37:07
population trends. As you can see,
00:37:09
there is information in all of the
00:37:13
territory and on the islands, although in
00:37:16
some areas this information is much
00:37:20
Greater this is evidently because
00:37:22
in those areas the population is larger
00:37:25
while proportionally there are more
00:37:26
people who can participate and also
00:37:29
in some cases because there have been
00:37:31
particular projects by the
00:37:36
communities that have allowed us to increase
00:37:39
participation and have more
00:37:42
data available
00:37:47
Throughout these years, well, as I have
00:37:49
mentioned, these 25 years the number of
00:37:51
volunteers has been increasing and with
00:37:54
this we also have an increase in the
00:37:56
information obtained, both a greater number
00:37:58
of species from which we can calculate
00:38:01
their population trend and a greater
00:38:03
consistency of the species. of which
00:38:06
we have information from the first
00:38:08
years, which tend to be the most
00:38:10
common species and which are more distributed, which is why
00:38:13
we have a greater amount of data. In
00:38:17
addition, during these years there has been an
00:38:21
increase in the improvement of technologies,
00:38:24
as we all know in 25 years I have
00:38:27
everything increased very quickly
00:38:29
and from the first year that the first
00:38:31
years that the field data were taken
00:38:35
was taken in a field notebook or on
00:38:37
paper cards we already had prepared
00:38:41
so we took all the volunteers, it
00:38:43
has happened to the fact that currently This
00:38:46
data collection is much simpler
00:38:47
because there is a mobile application to
00:38:50
be able to record the data directly and there
00:38:53
is also a
00:38:56
bird tracking website available heretic point where
00:38:59
once the field sampling is done
00:39:02
all the data is recorded and
00:39:05
each participant can enter to
00:39:07
edit themselves. If you made a mistake or made
00:39:10
a mistake, you can make inquiries,
00:39:14
contact us and many other
00:39:17
functions and we have also developed
00:39:19
an application that allows you to
00:39:23
train in the recognition of
00:39:27
birds by song in this program to
00:39:30
monitor what volunteers do.
00:39:32
in the field is to record the contacts
00:39:34
of the birds that they detect and these
00:39:38
contacts can be through the
00:39:40
birds that they identify visually or by the ones
00:39:42
that they listen to. This part of
00:39:47
identifying the birds by song
00:39:49
can be more complicated and so
00:39:51
with this application because it allows the
00:39:55
good volunteer, anyone who
00:39:57
wants to use it, to practice in a
00:40:00
didactic and entertaining way
00:40:03
with the different songs because in a
00:40:06
simpler way they can choose
00:40:09
different habitats and go from a
00:40:13
simpler level with few species to
00:40:16
more complicated levels in the that
00:40:18
there are several species that even overlap
00:40:22
with all this data that the volunteers send us,
00:40:26
we currently have
00:40:30
information for 114 species of
00:40:33
common birds that we call little birds,
00:40:37
in addition to these species, as in
00:40:40
field sampling, data is taken from
00:40:43
all the species that are found. see or
00:40:46
hear all those that are detected,
00:40:47
we can also have
00:40:49
information on other less common ones such
00:40:51
as raptors or
00:40:53
other groups of aquatic birds, which is
00:40:58
better for them in the
00:41:00
specific censuses that are carried out, but
00:41:03
we can also see that the
00:41:04
results that are obtained with blood
00:41:06
because they are quite related, those are
00:41:12
quite consistent with those that are
00:41:13
obtained with the specific ones,
00:41:16
well, for some
00:41:18
species I have given an example of a
00:41:20
graph, real cotton, as you can
00:41:22
see in these 25 years, well, it starts
00:41:25
from the 98 well, for reasons that
00:41:27
I cannot go into now, its population has
00:41:32
clearly been in decline, although if you
00:41:35
observe years of improvements, this
00:41:38
can occur in many species due to the
00:41:40
characteristics of the collections of
00:41:42
birds that have ups and downs
00:41:46
over the years, it depends a lot. of the
00:41:48
previous springs of the
00:41:50
reproduction conditions of that same year there are
00:41:53
several variables that intervene
00:41:55
but in the end what matters is the
00:41:58
decrease in the slope and that is seen in the
00:42:00
graph of the decrease in the population
00:42:04
in this case
00:42:06
in addition to having information on
00:42:10
species trends if with the
00:42:14
data from the sacre program if we take into
00:42:16
account the trends of the species
00:42:20
that mainly inhabit a
00:42:23
certain environment, for example if we take into
00:42:25
account the most common agricultural birds
00:42:28
that are related to that environment
00:42:30
we can make an index of the
00:42:35
general trend that is observed in the
00:42:37
birds of that environment and we can see, for
00:42:39
example, that agricultural birds have
00:42:42
had a significant decrease since the
00:42:46
beginning year. I
00:42:50
specifically mention agricultural birds because
00:42:52
the indicator of agricultural birds is an
00:42:55
indicator that is takes into account in an
00:42:59
established way
00:43:03
and well we can also see that
00:43:06
forest birds and urban birds in general
00:43:10
show an increase,
00:43:13
the festive ones would be there around
00:43:16
stability but more tending to
00:43:19
decrease
00:43:21
overall well not all
00:43:24
agricultural bird species were evidently
00:43:26
in decline but most of us can
00:43:28
see that in general of the total
00:43:30
results of the trends of the
00:43:33
common areas of those 114 species for
00:43:36
which we currently have information
00:43:38
we see that there are 37 percent of them
00:43:42
that are in subscribe
00:43:46
and well it seems that although Let's see that there is
00:43:49
more that is increasing, which would be 44
00:43:52
percent of the species. The increase
00:43:54
that may seem to be positive but
00:43:56
in reality is not because we must take into
00:43:58
account the 37 that are in
00:44:00
decline. The ideal situation would be a
00:44:05
situation of stability like this in
00:44:08
19 percent of the species
00:44:14
and well, the ultimate objective of this
00:44:18
monitoring program, the
00:44:20
main objective is to obtain
00:44:24
trends in bird populations
00:44:26
because they are indicators of the
00:44:29
biodiversity of the media, as I
00:44:31
mentioned at the beginning. The key element
00:44:33
is the volunteers who provide us with
00:44:36
the data and it is analyzed
00:44:40
thanks to a statistical tool
00:44:43
that has been
00:44:46
developed by the
00:44:48
Dutch statistical department, which is the
00:44:50
Jim program and which is used by
00:44:53
all the programs
00:44:56
of the European Union, this
00:44:59
monitoring program. It is carried out not only in Spain
00:45:01
but in almost all of Europe and also
00:45:04
internationally in several other
00:45:07
continents.
00:45:09
These analyzed data on
00:45:12
population trends of
00:45:16
bird populations, in addition to being
00:45:17
indicators of biodiversity, are
00:45:20
currently used, for example, to
00:45:23
evaluate a greater number of
00:45:26
species in this new edition of the
00:45:30
red book that is being prepared in which they
00:45:32
could be prepared in previous editions.
00:45:37
In addition, the trend of
00:45:41
bird populations is a value that is used
00:45:45
to catalog the species in the
00:45:48
different categories. of threat by the
00:45:52
wii cn, in addition to the size of the population
00:45:56
and the area of ​​occupancy, and the species
00:45:59
may be included in certain
00:46:02
species catalogs, but well, this will already
00:46:04
be told to us by the fellow blogger
00:46:06
in the conservation part, so
00:46:11
all the data of this program
00:46:13
follow-up reports are also requested by
00:46:18
scientists to carry out their own
00:46:20
articles and studies since without them they
00:46:24
would not be able to collect so much
00:46:27
information from so many years to carry out
00:46:30
these studies, so this information
00:46:32
is very useful for them to
00:46:34
draw other conclusions that are different or
00:46:37
more specific than the ones that taking out,
00:46:40
as you have also mentioned, these,
00:46:46
this monitoring program is also
00:46:49
carried out in other European countries and we
00:46:50
transfer our data, well,
00:46:54
we send them to calculate the trends,
00:46:58
the European trends and well, all
00:47:03
these results of the sacre program
00:47:04
are more described in the en the bulletin
00:47:08
that we have just released on
00:47:10
wildlife monitoring programs in
00:47:12
work groups together with other programs that are
00:47:13
carried out and that all the
00:47:17
volunteers receive,
00:47:20
well, with this I hope to have
00:47:23
given a
00:47:24
global vision and this is all, thank you very much, thank you very much,
00:47:29
great. We are
00:47:32
spending a bit of time to see if you
00:47:33
can be synthetic in 10
00:47:35
more minutes and if not, as tight as
00:47:39
possible thanks Virginia and it is
00:47:42
the turn of our
00:47:46
25-year veteran volunteer participating without pause
00:47:49
by mclaren day forward fat
00:47:55
Hello, good morning Juan Carlos, very
00:47:58
good morning to all of you, and at the outset, I
00:48:01
am going to thank you very much for
00:48:04
giving me a voice on behalf of the
00:48:06
volunteers of this program, it is
00:48:09
believed, and also how not to congratulate them, not to
00:48:12
congratulate them for those 25 years in the
00:48:16
environment of this monitoring and what is
00:48:19
truly allowing us is to
00:48:22
get to know more in much more
00:48:26
detail all those species that
00:48:28
populate our great Iberian peninsula and
00:48:32
then locally including the species
00:48:35
that we have in municipal areas
00:48:37
well I
00:48:38
am going to share with you one presentation in
00:48:41
order to make this talk a little more enjoyable
00:48:44
and thus be able to make
00:48:47
you understand what these
00:48:50
25 years have been dedicated to or the monitoring and
00:48:55
study of a hidden region in the
00:48:58
Rioja Alavesa
00:48:59
within what is the
00:49:02
historical territory of Álvava
00:49:06
I hope you are all seeing this
00:49:09
screen in which from the outset I am going to
00:49:11
talk on the one hand about those 25 years of
00:49:14
experience that one has had and on the
00:49:17
other hand about that support for seo birlife
00:49:19
that we want to give from the
00:49:21
city council of Vitoria itself gasteiz and how
00:49:24
could we not thank seo s for
00:49:27
the opportunity it gave us to go and
00:49:31
visit one of the magnificent
00:49:34
wine regions of the south of Álava when
00:49:37
one wakes up with these landscapes when
00:49:40
you can be lucky enough to
00:49:43
get twice a year observe
00:49:46
get enjoy the undulating
00:49:50
and full relief in short you are already
00:49:53
seeing it of vineyards of this most
00:49:55
Mediterranean part of our
00:49:57
historical territory and the most commented and ramón how
00:50:00
curious I also wanted to bring out the
00:50:04
east this news that was broadcast in
00:50:10
1996 and that he has rescued
00:50:12
by dusting off that folder that he created and that
00:50:16
I began to fill in that year of a
00:50:19
project that gave us all the energy
00:50:22
here in Vitoria Gasteiz and I tell everyone how
00:50:25
lucky we were at that time
00:50:27
was that
00:50:29
one of the best ornithologists at the level
00:50:32
national who is Alejandro Honrubia
00:50:34
transmitted the information to us that from
00:50:36
SEO Birlife they wanted to launch a
00:50:39
bird monitoring project and here
00:50:42
I was from 1995 and already in Vitoria Gasteiz
00:50:45
knowing that he wanted to launch that
00:50:47
pilot project that Ramón Martín
00:50:49
has already commented because we also
00:50:51
began to investigate, we started at the neck
00:50:54
and so thanks to this we were able
00:50:57
for two years to sample with a
00:51:00
similar methodology, not the same but
00:51:02
similar to the one that appears
00:51:04
below, already in the year 96 we were able to
00:51:07
sample Álava in the years 95 and 96 and
00:51:11
with the results obtained,
00:51:14
we present a small poster in
00:51:16
those thirteenth days with
00:51:18
Spanish mythological events that were held
00:51:20
in Figueres and well, 97 arrived,
00:51:25
the first year in which we launched ourselves into
00:51:27
the adventure,
00:51:29
produces you will read this follow-up in each
00:51:31
one of the grids and I am going to give three
00:51:35
things that were curious to me and that
00:51:38
continue to be interesting to me 25 years ago, one
00:51:42
was
00:51:43
how they changed, not how they have changed the
00:51:46
methodology when choosing the
00:51:49
grids, because if you look at that
00:51:51
area that was pointed out to you, spoke that one
00:51:54
could go to sample in a radius of 100
00:51:56
kilometers from Vitoria along with one
00:51:59
of the cities that, together with Seville and
00:52:01
Valence in Valencia, were going to launch
00:52:04
197 this census and it caught my attention
00:52:07
because at that time we
00:52:10
would not be able to select the grid but
00:52:13
that the grid was going to be selected
00:52:15
based on a random procedure, a
00:52:18
random procedure by pse
00:52:21
or in madrid in such a way that
00:52:23
we would receive the grid that was
00:52:25
deemed appropriate from the central cabinet
00:52:28
and we would leave your world to encourage
00:52:31
us to carry out despite that
00:52:33
peculiarity that they could be sent
00:52:35
100 kilometers from our city
00:52:38
because we are living in one of
00:52:41
the richest and most
00:52:44
diverse regions in terms of biology, in
00:52:47
terms of living things and in In this
00:52:49
specific case to the birds, you see that here it
00:52:51
shows you that map that came out in
00:52:53
2003 in the atlas of
00:52:55
breeding birds that frames us in our
00:52:57
region as one of the richest in terms
00:52:59
of political biodiversity in such a way
00:53:02
that when One of them received a letter
00:53:05
back from Madrid saying about 890,
00:53:09
gives you the grid that I had to create in the
00:53:12
first place because they sent me there to the
00:53:14
south to the edge of the historical territory
00:53:17
of Álava to that Mediterranean region of the
00:53:20
Rioja Alavesa area, well, I tell a
00:53:23
secret a secret that also sometimes
00:53:25
catches my attention
00:53:26
I chose two grids and the second
00:53:29
turned out I have been even further
00:53:30
away in the heart of La Rioja and I
00:53:34
was doing that grid in the
00:53:36
first two years and then I
00:53:39
passed it on to a My friend
00:53:41
started with it but I think that the data
00:53:43
remained, but this one that catches me
00:53:45
is closer to just 60 kilometers
00:53:49
from the capital because it is much more
00:53:51
accessible in such a way that in those
00:53:53
years in which one begins to drive the
00:53:56
car than to travel because the paths,
00:53:58
well, in the account of the richness of highs
00:54:01
that it has within the seconds of the
00:54:03
second questions that I wanted to name
00:54:05
is that in that year 1997 the effort that was
00:54:08
asked of all of us
00:54:10
who had a grid that was
00:54:12
quite heterogeneous
00:54:15
in terms of To the typology of environments
00:54:17
I find the differences or techniques that
00:54:21
we can find in the different
00:54:23
ecosystems meant that we had to
00:54:25
show, as I say, 30
00:54:28
sampling points since only
00:54:31
20 were shown in that 20 stations in those
00:54:33
areas in the grids the environment
00:54:36
was much more homogeneous and that
00:54:39
was also a detail since the sacre was carried out
00:54:41
in those years 97-98, even
00:54:44
entering the year the 21st century made it
00:54:48
really expensive not to spend five
00:54:51
minutes sampling in each of the
00:54:53
30 stations based on the
00:54:55
travel, one spent almost
00:54:57
the entire morning and I'm even going to
00:54:59
tell you that the morning assumption was spent
00:55:01
on some occasions, especially
00:55:03
since the first sampling between
00:55:05
April 15 and May 15,
00:55:08
of course we are talking about a
00:55:11
really very very terrain. rich where not only the
00:55:13
vineyard for the greatest percentage of the
00:55:15
grid is the one that dominates but
00:55:17
we have oak forests in that
00:55:19
10 by 10 grid areas of
00:55:21
scrub rosemary cultivate this thousands
00:55:24
of amanda that together with the large
00:55:27
extensions of field of the executive or the
00:55:29
own pastures that come from those areas
00:55:31
also in which the plowings
00:55:33
make the fence has failed of that
00:55:35
capacity of regeneration of the
00:55:37
hervencies give a truly
00:55:40
rich tone to all that ambient environment also
00:55:43
moderated by that mosaic of animals or
00:55:46
almond trees that we can find
00:55:47
that together with small
00:55:49
endorheic lagoons such as in this case that of
00:55:52
Calahorra Logroño and that is within
00:55:54
our grid or that woman that forms
00:55:57
that border that forms with the
00:55:58
autonomous community of La Rioja the Ebro River that
00:56:00
together with those remains in beautiful of
00:56:02
its own river bed give this
00:56:05
grid
00:56:07
impressive in the scope of the
00:56:09
species of horticultural species in
00:56:12
such a way that that first tour of the
00:56:15
year 97 well you can imagine in the end
00:56:19
they tried to fulfill each of these in
00:56:22
different ecosystems today I propose
00:56:24
sabanitas or environments and with This
00:56:27
also brings us to another of the third
00:56:29
points that has changed today on
00:56:31
paper, I have already mentioned it, Virginia, years
00:56:34
in which all the
00:56:36
processing of information, both on
00:56:40
arrival from SEO and on return from
00:56:42
Vitoria to Madrid, was done via email. The
00:56:45
postcard made it a
00:56:48
real Havana, the sheets of paper
00:56:50
I remember from those famous A3s in which
00:56:53
the 30 stations appeared and which
00:56:55
even gave us the guideline in
00:56:58
those early years to dial the
00:57:01
number d
00:57:03
of how we saw them and we saw them
00:57:05
flying if We saw them singing or
00:57:07
even if the male swedan females, well
00:57:10
those are details today because they have gone down
00:57:13
in history thanks to this new
00:57:15
application that, as you all know,
00:57:17
makes it easier not only to work
00:57:20
in the field but also to do subsequent office work
00:57:22
and for that reason I would invite
00:57:24
each and every person from the party and
00:57:27
country to the sacred events, download this
00:57:29
because it allows us not only to
00:57:32
facilitate this exchange, that speed in
00:57:35
the flow of information but even
00:57:37
the water of those graphs that in many
00:57:39
cases I am going to tell you Also, the truth is that it
00:57:42
catches your attention because this is
00:57:44
wm 30, the grid with which it
00:57:47
arrived for 25 years and which is truly
00:57:50
an authentic hubbub. It is a
00:57:52
grid where no
00:57:55
increase or decrease can be seen, nor is there any lack of
00:57:59
abundance or number of species and
00:58:01
I told you that it is envy because why not on
00:58:03
some occasion with Carlos did Juan
00:58:05
Carlos del Moral come to show me
00:58:07
graphs of his particles in which
00:58:09
the decline or a certain decline
00:58:12
that we all had in mind and that we all
00:58:14
know this grid at the end could be seen or
00:58:17
this graph, sorry at the end, what it
00:58:19
is showing us is a little bit of a
00:58:21
variation in terms of an average of some
00:58:24
etc in the birds for each season and in
00:58:26
the environment of about 70 species on average
00:58:29
that are obtained in this
00:58:31
Mediterranean grid of the 120
00:58:34
species that for example are collected in
00:58:37
the delay of the 112 sorry species that are
00:58:39
collected from the player
00:58:42
and I am also going to tell you another
00:58:44
interesting detail which is being 40 km from
00:58:48
home having a mountain range of about 1400
00:58:52
meters of altitude that It is the Sierra de
00:58:54
Cantabria that makes my square one
00:58:56
of the most
00:58:58
visited squares in the entire national territory
00:59:00
because you cannot settle for
00:59:03
just two visits a year and I explain myself
00:59:05
due to that distance due to that
00:59:08
mountain range that in the end acts of the
00:59:11
cutting edge between the transition areas and the
00:59:14
Mediterranean,
00:59:15
when you get up early to see those skies
00:59:17
that the first slide showed and
00:59:19
you arrive at that area you can find
00:59:21
that in the middle part of the earth there is
00:59:23
fog in the Mediterranean part there is,
00:59:25
I think, wind from In fact, look, the month
00:59:28
of May is the month that reaches the
00:59:30
peak precipitation in this grid in
00:59:33
such a way that one does not have to return
00:59:36
home or there are even days in which the
00:59:38
wind is predominant there. We are not
00:59:40
in the middle of the Ebro valley and that makes that
00:59:42
one has to repeat
00:59:44
another of those morning sessions in
00:59:46
which one can sample with
00:59:49
favorable weather, but well, removing that
00:59:51
negative aspect, because I am going to
00:59:53
tell you below, we have
00:59:55
positive aspects. In the end,
00:59:57
I come is to create, the table is inclined
01:00:00
to visit three years it is giving us and
01:00:02
it is giving me the opportunity to know, for example,
01:00:04
how two certain
01:00:06
Mediterranean species are increasing because one has
01:00:07
already become accustomed to knowing where
01:00:10
they were with and soul, where the
01:00:11
distant ones are or where the shore sings year after year
01:00:13
and in this case another point that
01:00:20
is truly in crescendo ours
01:00:26
never that the fish and black
01:00:32
silver
01:00:34
flock to the shore or also those
01:00:39
species that are more scarce in
01:00:41
our area such as the turtle dove,
01:00:43
the bird demonstrated the long-tailed tunic or
01:00:46
the garden bunting and even A
01:00:49
bird that has also seen disappear in
01:00:51
the last 25 years has been the
01:00:53
real adapter. It is simply that it comes to
01:00:55
reflect what Virginia already mentioned
01:00:57
a minute ago, but not only have we
01:00:59
lost or alves
01:01:00
have lost ecosystems, we have
01:01:03
also lost, above all, the work it
01:01:05
carried out. the cattle on these lands and
01:01:08
that today we no longer truly
01:01:10
observe the
01:01:12
herds of sheep grazing we have
01:01:15
visited the lines they have increased they have
01:01:17
increased to a very large extent but
01:01:19
normally due to that risk factor that
01:01:21
phytosanitary professionals have in the
01:01:23
conservation environment of the species but
01:01:25
because today we are
01:01:27
encountering a new risk that is
01:01:29
trellised vines, we do
01:01:31
not know what effect it may have on
01:01:32
the area
01:01:33
but I decide the truth is that it worries us,
01:01:36
however we hope to see that we can see
01:01:38
the sun again in such a way that this
01:01:41
support for bird life is unconditional and is
01:01:43
necessary and is not only necessary
01:01:45
from the personal but
01:01:48
particular level as a volunteer to these
01:01:50
censuses but also from the level of
01:01:52
the administration itself and in this case
01:01:55
of the local administration of the which is
01:01:57
the city council of vitoria gasteiz
01:01:59
which we have signed an agreement with
01:02:01
seo/birdlife so that they can carry
01:02:05
out this urban sacred in the area
01:02:08
of ​​our city, that is,
01:02:09
we already started in 2014 if you have it and
01:02:13
we are proud of binner because
01:02:14
We are going to do seven years of monitoring
01:02:16
bird species in our
01:02:19
municipal environment and look at the number of
01:02:22
sampling points in collaboration with
01:02:24
17 volunteers that we have had in this
01:02:27
last year, 2020, in this graph,
01:02:32
both graph since 2019 and that means that
01:02:35
we obtain in these moments,
01:02:38
such interesting trend graphs
01:02:41
to improve management with a
01:02:44
view to a much more
01:02:46
plausible conservation, much closer and much more
01:02:49
important, a conservation that gains
01:02:51
muscle that can ultimately provide the
01:02:54
species that we have in our
01:02:55
municipality and from there that the city council
01:02:57
of stage mining is
01:02:58
truly grateful to have
01:03:01
seo birlife to launch this
01:03:03
urban blood and that it is truly
01:03:06
showing us the importance of the
01:03:09
scientific community of the community of
01:03:12
citizen scientists to carry
01:03:14
out these censuses are multitude of
01:03:17
sampling points in a
01:03:19
much smaller, much more local area, but
01:03:21
in the end what counts is being able to
01:03:23
manage our means through
01:03:26
local data that allows us to
01:03:28
achieve the bird populations
01:03:31
in our municipality.
01:03:33
Hello,
01:03:35
thank you for here
01:03:38
like this.
01:03:41
many times the volunteers to all the
01:03:44
volunteers through me to
01:03:46
ultimately increase this community of
01:03:49
scientists within ornithology
01:03:51
within the organic citizenship that
01:03:54
allows us to increase the number of samplings
01:03:57
that we carry out in the coming years throughout
01:03:59
Spain.' thank you very much and
01:04:02
greetings
01:04:03
thanks to the cut we are going to change a
01:04:08
person of order because he has to leave
01:04:11
in a few minutes forgive now because we
01:04:14
also have to sneak in beatriz
01:04:17
creek who defends other things to
01:04:19
attend to and ahead of viatri who is going to
01:04:22
give us a vision of the typical world of
01:04:26
states jobs or thanks and let's see
01:04:29
what you see
01:04:34
I want to share the screen if we are going to go
01:04:41
while here
01:04:45
and him
01:04:47
[Music]
01:04:56
and
01:05:03
you have
01:05:08
a life I
01:05:12
get the part of the south there is a part
01:05:15
of itself
01:05:19
but since from here you can reach the
01:05:23
full screen well if you go there but
01:05:27
the tarot flag click on
01:05:30
goal will be under the banner that I
01:05:33
can't avoid but there is a part at the
01:05:34
top
01:05:43
and this is the truth you
01:05:46
tell me now well
01:05:49
thank you first of all yes well thank you
01:05:52
for In the invitation to participate, I wanted to
01:05:55
focus a little precisely on the
01:05:58
aspect of the importance of data
01:05:59
specifically from sacré for
01:06:02
scientific studies, Maite said, as well as
01:06:04
academic science, but I wanted to say
01:06:05
scientists in general, the opportunities
01:06:08
and limitations, starting a little,
01:06:10
let's also say Maite, it is very difficult
01:06:13
to define what citizen science is. I
01:06:15
had put one that can be debatable,
01:06:17
as she said, which is the participation
01:06:20
of non-academic people in
01:06:22
scientific programs and she herself also said
01:06:23
that it could be debatable how
01:06:26
science is defined, but for me from my
01:06:28
perspective science is any study
01:06:31
that is carried out with the scientific method
01:06:33
and I also said it in terms of the
01:06:36
and formulation of the question how to use
01:06:38
the data to refute or not a
01:06:42
hypothesis what formulas to eliminate
01:06:43
alternative hypotheses and
01:06:45
ultimately also the fact that those If the
01:06:49
work is evaluated by peers,
01:06:50
the methodology and the conclusions
01:06:52
are good, not starting out. It can be
01:06:55
debatable and it wants to be opened, but well,
01:06:57
I detected that the talk was organized
01:06:59
based on this premise, so one
01:07:03
of the good things that
01:07:05
citizen science actually has is
01:07:07
In
01:07:09
previous presentations that provide
01:07:11
a lot of data, one of the counterparts
01:07:14
is that there can also be a lot of
01:07:16
variability in our data because
01:07:19
many people actually participate. There
01:07:21
can be many sources of
01:07:23
variability, which is not a problem,
01:07:26
the fact that There is a lot of data that
01:07:28
was also emphasized in some of the
01:07:29
previous talks allows us to work on a
01:07:31
large scale that otherwise I believe
01:07:34
would be impossible
01:07:36
and in that sense part of the message that I
01:07:39
am going to make in the 9 days that I have is that
01:07:41
I believe that all
01:07:43
Citizen science information is
01:07:45
essential to answer certain
01:07:47
scientific questions, but the fact
01:07:49
that it is associated with certain
01:07:50
characteristics such as variability in
01:07:53
the quantity and quality of data
01:07:57
in space requires certain
01:08:00
characteristics also in terms of how it
01:08:03
is analyzed, how information is collated. information
01:08:05
so that the conclusions that emerge from
01:08:08
these programs are appropriate if
01:08:12
this is citizen science in general
01:08:13
and we focus on finding out what
01:08:16
I wanted to talk about in the
01:08:19
birdlife SEO program that contributes to the census of
01:08:22
common European birds and I insist For me,
01:08:25
one of the great scientific values
01:08:27
it has is that it allows us to obtain
01:08:29
information on a large scale at the
01:08:31
national level and I did want to emphasize
01:08:33
that they are obtained by people who have
01:08:36
ornithological training. I believe that this
01:08:37
is important both for valuing what
01:08:40
there is and for To highlight it, there are many
01:08:43
citizen science programs of all
01:08:45
kinds. Maite also said it in her
01:08:46
presentation and many of them did not
01:08:48
require more than the willingness to
01:08:50
participate. I think it is
01:08:51
particularly important to highlight that
01:08:53
the sacre is obtained with information from
01:08:57
people who spend time training. or has
01:08:59
happened before in their lives, all of us who
01:09:01
have gone out to the field to identify
01:09:03
Virginia also emphasizes the fact
01:09:06
that in fact specific training is provided
01:09:08
to the people who participate in
01:09:10
the serve. I think this is important to
01:09:11
highlight at the level of valuing
01:09:14
[Music ]
01:09:15
the information that comes that would not be
01:09:18
possible to obtain by a neutral citizen
01:09:21
and evidently the objective is to obtain
01:09:24
information on a multiplicity of
01:09:26
species which is good and
01:09:28
also has its limitations. I insist that it seems to me
01:09:31
that we must emphasize that it
01:09:34
provides a lot of information that is very
01:09:37
valuable scientifically but the type
01:09:39
of analysis that is done in terms of
01:09:42
the application of the scientific method will
01:09:45
vary depending on the question you
01:09:47
want to answer with this information,
01:09:49
which is not a problem in itself but you
01:09:51
simply have to take into account that
01:09:53
There are certain characteristics of this type
01:09:55
of information that must be taken into
01:09:57
account when analyzing them.
01:09:58
Virginia also took out a map before the
01:10:00
fact that since it is based on
01:10:03
where there are people who want to participate
01:10:05
in the program,
01:10:07
spatial distribution is not homogeneous in space
01:10:09
since the fundamental objective
01:10:12
of sacré is to obtain the maximum
01:10:14
possible information from a maximum
01:10:16
number of possible species within
01:10:18
the common birds these and then you are
01:10:21
interested in a specific species you may
01:10:23
have to take into account that the
01:10:25
detectability of certain species is not
01:10:27
the same as that of others that have come out
01:10:30
here talking about fantastically
01:10:33
its grid maintained over time
01:10:34
but we know that sometimes this
01:10:37
is not always the case
01:10:38
in some cases because people can
01:10:40
participate during a certain time of
01:10:42
the scale temporary then you have to stop
01:10:44
maintaining this grid for a
01:10:47
multitude of reasons then you can
01:10:49
go back to all this and it is
01:10:51
necessarily a problem it simply
01:10:53
provides specific characteristics to
01:10:57
this type of age that must be taken into
01:10:58
account when doing the analysis
01:11:00
in any case The messages have already been
01:11:04
said before and it seems to me that it is
01:11:06
essential. This program was made specifically
01:11:09
with the fundamental objective of evaluating
01:11:11
trends. I believe that the
01:11:14
scientific validity of this program for this
01:11:18
objective is beyond any doubt and has been
01:11:21
seen in it clearly.
01:11:22
studies I put here that talk
01:11:26
about the use of sacré together with
01:11:29
other pp camps programs for the
01:11:31
evaluation of trends at the European level
01:11:35
but as I said before
01:11:38
if we want to analyze
01:11:42
[Music]
01:11:44
the pattern of a specific species we may have to
01:11:47
do certain type of
01:11:51
specific analysis I give the example
01:11:52
here of the European turtle dove where
01:11:54
recently thanks to the collaboration
01:11:55
with seo/birdlife we ​​have reanalyzed the
01:11:58
sac-d information taking into account,
01:12:00
as I said, some of the
01:12:01
specific characteristics that have
01:12:04
allowed us to refine a little more in the
01:12:05
evaluation of the spatial trend but
01:12:08
beyond that, what seems very valid to me
01:12:10
from a scientific point of view
01:12:12
about all this type of programs is
01:12:15
that it allows the possibility of analyzing
01:12:17
what factors are associated with these
01:12:19
trends, which is
01:12:21
obviously essential from the scientific point of view
01:12:22
but also then to
01:12:24
use this information to
01:12:25
develop conservation policies and
01:12:28
for example one of the first I give
01:12:30
this example that came out in science one
01:12:34
of the most important scientific journals
01:12:35
how to determine to what
01:12:38
extent climate change could explain
01:12:41
the trend of certain species it
01:12:43
could be seen that
01:12:45
those species that
01:12:49
had been detected as more susceptible
01:12:52
to the climate changes
01:12:55
that we are leaving right now or
01:12:57
more recently another study that
01:13:00
tries to determine for
01:13:02
migratory birds what the relative effect was actually declining more
01:13:04
of climate change in the face of
01:13:07
land use both in the breeding and
01:13:09
wintering areas. If we go more home and
01:13:12
also around the house I say national because
01:13:15
maybe recently also as I said
01:13:17
in the previous work on the European turtle dove,
01:13:19
which is evidently a species
01:13:21
of great news time lara the same
01:13:24
the analysis of this information also
01:13:26
allowed us to detect, for example, that
01:13:28
there are more declines in areas that were
01:13:30
predominantly forestry compared to
01:13:32
agricultural ones, which has also
01:13:34
allowed us to put on the
01:13:36
international table the fact that we
01:13:38
also have to deal with
01:13:40
forest management in addition to agricultural management
01:13:43
when designing
01:13:45
conservation policies for this species,
01:13:47
then to summarize what are the
01:13:49
opportunities and limitations of using
01:13:53
programs such as the blood program for
01:13:55
scientific research, well, I say again,
01:13:57
for me it is a source
01:13:58
essential data to answer many
01:14:01
scientific questions and of course it is
01:14:03
appreciated both for the
01:14:05
spatial and temporal scale that things that
01:14:07
could not be answered if
01:14:09
this type of programs did not exist but
01:14:11
obviously because if the treatment and
01:14:13
analysis of said data can being
01:14:15
complex, they require great
01:14:17
human and scientific investment,
01:14:18
the data cannot be taken as is to use them, let's say
01:14:21
raw, to answer certain
01:14:23
questions and in that sense, I
01:14:25
wanted to emphasize in the end that it is
01:14:27
citizen science to return to this because
01:14:29
obviously it is the participation of The
01:14:31
citizens put more
01:14:35
curators of the information, which in this
01:14:36
case is over the line, who have to do
01:14:39
essential work not only in the
01:14:41
coordination of data collection but also
01:14:43
in the filtering
01:14:45
of the initial
01:14:47
homogenization treatment than in other
01:14:50
citizen science programs.
01:14:52
Other scientists can obviously carry out
01:14:54
the analysis, some of
01:14:56
those scientists are in seo birdlife
01:14:58
directly but also from the
01:15:00
integration of other scientists in the
01:15:02
scientific community and put and at the end
01:15:04
of the end users
01:15:05
Ramón Martí is also said at the beginning one of
01:15:08
the objectives of this type of programs
01:15:11
is that they are useful to society,
01:15:13
then obviously having more
01:15:14
collaboration with end users of
01:15:18
conservation,
01:15:20
administration management, since it also allows us to
01:15:22
first develop questions that are
01:15:25
useful and know how to answer them with the
01:15:29
validity and particularities
01:15:33
of the limitations. of this type of
01:15:35
data and there I am, thank you all,
01:15:40
stop sharing, here we are,
01:15:43
thank you
01:15:49
very much, thank you very much, coming for your vision
01:15:52
of the world from a scientific point of view
01:15:54
is great for us and good
01:15:57
that you are not wasting a few minutes,
01:15:59
we will respond for you and yes made
01:16:01
that to be you worry you
01:16:02
thank you for your help
01:16:04
well now and at the level
01:16:07
of Belgium and person of the film the
01:16:12
European once in his parties is going to give
01:16:14
an international vision of these
01:16:16
works
01:16:18
[Music]
01:16:20
go ahead
01:16:22
hello my days to all
01:16:28
but I have to
01:16:36
I have to share it
01:16:41
for free
01:16:46
good morning everyone first of all I
01:16:49
want to thank seo birdlife for
01:16:52
inviting me to the name of l pss to
01:16:56
explain a little what the
01:16:59
contributions of this program are, it was created in
01:17:01
Europe
01:17:03
elvis and it is an organization that
01:17:06
tries to unite all the institutes
01:17:11
expert organizations in
01:17:13
bird monitoring in Europe and we have the objective
01:17:16
of gathering the best
01:17:21
possible data on the
01:17:23
distribution and
01:17:27
change of bird populations in
01:17:29
Europe to have better data to
01:17:31
support the conservation of these birds
01:17:35
and we have three large projects one is
01:17:38
the good one is where are the birds good
01:17:42
the distribution of birds at the
01:17:45
European level with the European atlas that we have
01:17:49
the second edition that was published
01:17:53
last December in the month of
01:17:56
last December is a masterpiece of
01:17:58
European ornithology also seo
01:18:01
birdlife has participated a lot to
01:18:03
prepare all this work
01:18:06
a second project is the dog see by
01:18:09
tyler but for total dot org it is a
01:18:12
portal that tries to unite all the
01:18:14
data that comes from the portals of the
01:18:17
large citizen science portals
01:18:19
in ornithology that are gibert observed
01:18:24
and all the
01:18:26
[Music] portals
01:18:27
in Europe
01:18:31
and
01:18:32
[Music]
01:18:34
and then this this project allows us to
01:18:38
see across the entire continent what
01:18:40
bird observations are like all
01:18:44
year round and the third program is the one that
01:18:47
interests us today it is the European bread as in
01:18:51
word monitoring skin it is good it is a
01:18:53
very long name and English speakers
01:18:56
use the initials and pronounce it
01:18:58
quickly small something like that
01:19:01
and this program this project
01:19:04
good is the idea is to unite all the data
01:19:07
that comes from the program as is believed,
01:19:09
but in all of Europe there are 28 countries where
01:19:13
there is a monitoring program, as is
01:19:16
believed, and in total it is estimated that there are 15 -
01:19:21
mythologists who go out into the field to count
01:19:24
birds in spring each year,
01:19:27
which allows us to have
01:19:29
population trends of 170
01:19:32
significant species. In Europe
01:19:35
throughout the continent and the focus is
01:19:38
more on the terrestrial or most
01:19:40
abundant species, that is, the birds of our
01:19:43
general environments, the agricultural areas,
01:19:46
the forests and well, our
01:19:49
general environments and how each
01:19:53
country works, like here, the sacre has to
01:19:56
do its job. field sample many times
01:19:59
with many volunteers trained and
01:20:01
dedicated to recognizing the birds
01:20:05
and each country can do it in its own way
01:20:08
because some prefer to make a fixed point
01:20:12
each year the same points others
01:20:15
prefer to think of the birds walking
01:20:18
in transit lines but the
01:20:20
important thing is that All programs
01:20:23
have to follow the
01:20:25
general recommendations of the PSC Jeep to have
01:20:29
a minimum standardization to be able to
01:20:32
analyze the data in
01:20:36
some way
01:20:38
and that is the second stage is the
01:20:43
organizers in each country is to know
01:20:46
what in the case of the sacré They collect all
01:20:48
the field data and analyze
01:20:51
population trends using
01:20:55
the trim program many times, as Virginia has already said, and then they
01:20:59
can have national trends and
01:21:01
also the good thing with climate is that
01:21:03
the results of the car can be sent
01:21:06
directly to the coordination of the
01:21:09
small one that is located in Prague
01:21:13
what they do is they put together
01:21:20
new trends of all species
01:21:22
to have European trends but it is
01:21:26
important to know that
01:21:28
the weight of each country is clearly taken into account in this case
01:21:31
why
01:21:33
a Although it is much more abundant in a
01:21:35
country, it is logical that its trend has
01:21:38
more weight when calculating
01:21:42
European trends. The good thing about
01:21:45
this coordination is that feedback can be given
01:21:48
on the results at the
01:21:52
national level, that is, we have a
01:21:55
control but plus a review of the
01:21:57
data and the way we
01:21:59
calculate the sample, for example,
01:22:03
a way of our way of calculating
01:22:06
the data at the national level gives us
01:22:09
jazz feedback and so we can ensure
01:22:12
that we do it well in all countries
01:22:15
and The third stage is also done by the
01:22:18
people of Prague from the
01:22:20
Chic Ornithological Society of the Czech Republic.
01:22:25
As I have already explained, Virginia,
01:22:28
they do a median of the trends
01:22:31
of the species by habitats by
01:22:34
ecological types of the species and thus
01:22:37
we can calculate multi-
01:22:39
species indicators, one of the most important and best
01:22:42
known is the agricultural bird indicator. The
01:22:46
index has played
01:22:49
a very important role at the
01:22:51
political level because we have been able to see
01:22:54
that something was happening, something bad was happening in
01:22:58
agricultural areas and that perhaps it has to
01:23:02
change agricultural policy at the
01:23:04
European level also a very important thing
01:23:07
that at the scientific level is good
01:23:11
has been done thanks to this data
01:23:16
is to better understand what is really
01:23:20
happening is happening with the
01:23:22
biodiversity crisis because 20 or 30 years ago years,
01:23:28
the biodiversity crisis many
01:23:30
people thought was focused on the
01:23:33
rarest, most spectacular or
01:23:36
most charismatic species such as raptors or
01:23:39
waterfowl,
01:23:42
and in recent years, thanks to this
01:23:44
data on the
01:23:46
population trends of common birds, we have
01:23:48
realized Well, maybe
01:23:51
many birds
01:23:53
that were rarer before, like
01:23:57
these aquatic birds, are now
01:24:01
better off under this protection. The
01:24:04
conservation status is a little better, but on
01:24:07
the other hand, there are many abundant species in
01:24:10
our environments, such as the house sparrow
01:24:12
or other species. more abundant
01:24:15
are in decline and that is key to
01:24:18
understanding what is really happening
01:24:20
with this biodiversity crisis
01:24:25
these results
01:24:27
international indicators are used in
01:24:30
many reports many many
01:24:34
official institutes such as Eurostat or the European Court of
01:24:37
Auditors for example that has come
01:24:39
out a report on
01:24:44
Europe's common agricultural policy,
01:24:48
which has so far failed to stop the
01:24:53
decline in agricultural biodiversity. A
01:24:54
very important indicator in this regard
01:24:57
is what is calculated with data
01:25:02
from Sacre and all other European programs.
01:25:07
This is what we have seen is that we have
01:25:11
used a lot of data so far
01:25:14
more than 35
01:25:16
international publications on the effect of
01:25:19
climate change as we have already seen
01:25:22
thanks to Beatriz and some other studies
01:25:26
that can also be done are to compare
01:25:29
trends between different
01:25:31
European countries for example In this case the
01:25:33
European starling,
01:25:36
which in Europe has a bad situation
01:25:40
in general, these species
01:25:45
since it also uses
01:25:47
agricultural spaces a lot has lost 70% of its
01:25:51
population in 40 years but this is in
01:25:55
general but if we look in each country
01:25:57
there is a lot of difference in There is a lot of contrast
01:26:00
in the situation in the west and north of
01:26:03
Europe, we have a very
01:26:05
negative situation with the very strong loss of
01:26:07
their troops, however, in the
01:26:11
center or east of Europe there is this
01:26:16
species, there is even a command
01:26:18
commenting on their quite strong troops
01:26:22
in Spain. Ayala declared other species
01:26:25
as well but the situation is quite
01:26:27
positive as well and so with
01:26:30
this these differences in trend we
01:26:34
can try to coordinate with other
01:26:36
information for example how I know how
01:26:40
the use of practices are changing
01:26:43
at the agricultural level one
01:26:46
hypothesis we have is
01:26:48
These
01:26:50
differences can be explained with the change in
01:26:53
agriculture, which is a little different in
01:26:56
the European countries in the north and
01:26:59
west of Europe.
01:27:00
For example,
01:27:03
livestock farming is changing a lot at the moment, there are much fewer cows
01:27:06
in the meadows, they are simply raised more.
01:27:09
the cows inside the jugs and
01:27:11
then
01:27:13
we can think that the insects
01:27:15
that depend on this habitat of
01:27:21
earned degrees are also good that perhaps
01:27:24
the abundance of these insects is
01:27:26
changing and can affect, we think it is
01:27:30
a hypothesis, a species like the
01:27:33
starling because it needs these insects
01:27:35
For the food of their chicks,
01:27:40
we have
01:27:44
very important work on indicators at the
01:27:48
European level that allows us to understand
01:27:50
the biodiversity crisis much better. In
01:27:53
the future, we wait for the start of all
01:27:57
the organizations that are part of it.
01:28:03
of more species also from
01:28:07
more countries such as southeastern Europe or
01:28:09
Russia,
01:28:11
there we also need to know what is
01:28:13
happening with birds and we also
01:28:16
want to integrate more other data from the
01:28:19
environment or even from other other
01:28:22
animal groups to better understand what
01:28:25
the things of the trends that
01:28:27
we observe in bird populations
01:28:30
well and in the end there is nothing to
01:28:34
say that the role of observers
01:28:36
and coordinators of the sacré is fundamental
01:28:38
for this project because Spain has
01:28:40
an importance
01:28:43
in many many birds in, for example,
01:28:47
agricultural areas well and
01:28:51
thank you very much to everyone and especially to all
01:28:53
the seo birdlife volunteers,
01:28:56
congratulations and well, we hope to see the
01:29:00
sacre for many more years.
01:29:05
I think we have a very good global vision
01:29:07
and finally,
01:29:11
Pablo is going to intervene and give us a
01:29:14
vision of the contribution of all this
01:29:16
information
01:29:18
to the conservation work in
01:29:19
silverlight and also what it could
01:29:22
contribute to entities such as
01:29:24
administrations or other organizations,
01:29:31
thank you Juan Carlos well, for my
01:29:34
part, as Juan Carlos says, the idea
01:29:38
is to tell how, well, the
01:29:41
sacre program contributes to carrying out
01:29:45
conservation actions with all this information
01:29:47
that we obtain I'm
01:29:51
going to share the screen
01:29:54
[Music]
01:29:55
let's see the presentation
01:29:59
well the first of all is that I think
01:30:03
we are in luck as we have already
01:30:06
said
01:30:08
and especially within the ones that
01:30:11
because the The program is one of the
01:30:14
key elements of its DNA.
01:30:17
It is a good program that complies with
01:30:21
all the actions that I know
01:30:26
and that are developed from scratch. I
01:30:30
am having problems sharing
01:30:34
if you see it now because I already see it in the
01:30:38
presentation,
01:30:42
I am going to give it
01:31:05
okay,
01:31:07
yes. I am going to give it as a presentation
01:31:13
because nothing, as the program said,
01:31:16
grows is almost one of the most
01:31:21
distinctive features of the desire to touch everything,
01:31:23
all the environments in which it is believed and
01:31:25
finally not as it is
01:31:28
and bet on this battalion of our
01:31:31
partners and supporters that is going out
01:31:33
into the field
01:31:34
twice each spring is to bet
01:31:39
on that scientific profile that we have and
01:31:42
that makes us unique or almost unique in the
01:31:47
national panorama
01:31:49
and on citizen science and on
01:31:52
involving all this in
01:31:54
conservation actions based on evidence
01:32:00
aspects key to our organization
01:32:03
so well simply result in
01:32:07
the truth that this presentation that will
01:32:09
serve transversally to all those that have been
01:32:11
made so far because well it
01:32:13
includes elements that have been treated
01:32:15
to give it a touch more of conservation
01:32:18
and well the objective of the sacre program
01:32:22
This is to know the state of
01:32:23
conservation of common birds of all
01:32:25
types, especially these small birds,
01:32:28
which are the most representative
01:32:30
in sampling work, while
01:32:34
other species require
01:32:35
specific programs. We see ourselves in
01:32:37
aquatic birds of prey, although They can
01:32:39
obtain certain trend indicators
01:32:42
through the sacré, but well,
01:32:45
knowing this trend has much more to it
01:32:47
and it gives us
01:32:50
tremendous information
01:32:53
to work on the conservation of
01:32:55
throwing. As you will see, the first aspect is
01:32:59
that we have
01:33:01
three key factors to to be able to
01:33:04
use the sacre to work on
01:33:06
bird conservation one is the
01:33:10
distribution of the participants
01:33:13
this graph that Virginia has already shown
01:33:16
before the participation of the secret
01:33:18
shows how there is a distribution although
01:33:21
there are certain areas in which also due to
01:33:24
the size of the population There is much more
01:33:26
participation but we have a very good
01:33:28
distribution of participants and
01:33:30
grids sampled each year. In addition
01:33:34
to that distribution, the
01:33:35
number of those more than 1,000 people who
01:33:38
are going out into the field is important, as it is assumed in
01:33:40
my grids, although they are done every
01:33:42
year and this It is a tremendous volume of information
01:33:47
and thirdly it is the tendency to
01:33:49
have a long series of data
01:33:52
observing 25 years, well, 25 years of
01:33:56
monitoring common birds of small
01:34:00
birds
01:34:03
is a tool that,
01:34:05
well, in general a large amount of
01:34:07
information
01:34:10
as we will see as already have arisen in
01:34:12
some previous experiences and
01:34:14
I will also show you in this one the fact of
01:34:17
having such long series
01:34:19
allows us to understand much better the
01:34:21
functioning of the room because those
01:34:23
small variations that some
01:34:25
naturally suffer from fluctuations in their
01:34:28
population or long-term fluctuations
01:34:30
that we can see the changes in the
01:34:33
trend, the trend is showing
01:34:35
but we cannot stay in the
01:34:38
linear trend from the year 98 to
01:34:41
2020 2021 but rather we have to see
01:34:44
what has happened throughout that period not
01:34:46
because there may be disparate trends
01:34:49
well one of The first examples of the
01:34:54
usefulness it has in conservation is to
01:34:56
highlight the
01:34:59
conservation status of birds so that we are
01:35:01
talking about studying specific species
01:35:03
and many of you have known about the
01:35:06
campaigns about the bird of the year that are
01:35:08
based precisely on having
01:35:10
detected that These species such as the
01:35:12
sparrow, the swift, the swallow, the
01:35:16
turtle dove in recent years or
01:35:18
nocturnal birds such as the owl are only
01:35:22
based on having this information
01:35:24
that tells us that these species
01:35:27
are suffering a population decline and
01:35:29
we must pay attention to their
01:35:31
conservation,
01:35:32
then we have all this
01:35:34
information that allows us to evaluate the
01:35:37
state of conservation of the water. There are
01:35:41
several that in fact the scoop could be
01:35:44
useful for each of them, but
01:35:47
really the great use it has is to
01:35:49
evaluate this evaluation of the population
01:35:53
and this balance. of the population with a
01:35:55
participation that we have in Spain,
01:35:59
in addition to a thousand people working
01:36:01
more than 1,000 sampling points or
01:36:02
10 by 10 kilometer sampling grids, it
01:36:05
also allows us not only to
01:36:07
know the ownership of birds but also to
01:36:08
contribute, as I just mentioned.
01:36:11
now contribute to knowing the
01:36:13
conservation status of birds in Europe both
01:36:16
on a large scale and those small
01:36:17
differences that may exist on a
01:36:20
regional scale due to different climates due
01:36:23
to different uses of the territory, types
01:36:26
of agriculture or livestock, as
01:36:28
mentioned,
01:36:30
types of forest environments, etc.
01:36:33
but Not only that but in those
01:36:35
areas in which we have a
01:36:37
fairly representative participation on a
01:36:40
regional scale we can determine the
01:36:44
conservation status of the birds in
01:36:45
these areas if one of the cases is the
01:36:47
Valencian community in which well I
01:36:50
explain it because it is the place where I
01:36:53
work and you want me to eat all this
01:36:55
information as coordinator of the
01:36:57
monitoring programs and also as
01:36:59
responsible for species and spaces
01:37:02
within this office well, here
01:37:05
in fact recently because we have been able to
01:37:07
present the allegations to the new
01:37:10
regional catalog of species threatened
01:37:11
because we have a series of twenty-something
01:37:14
years in which we can determine
01:37:17
how the species have
01:37:19
evolved in recent years and
01:37:20
depending on how this
01:37:23
criterion is viewed according to each species, we can warn
01:37:26
about the decline of some species that
01:37:27
the administration itself has not even
01:37:29
has considered that there could be
01:37:31
threats, for example it could be the
01:37:33
common lark, one of these
01:37:37
as autonomous does not say that it does not have
01:37:40
information and we say that we do
01:37:41
have that information and we
01:37:43
put it at your disposal and this
01:37:46
information is sufficient because
01:37:48
we have a sufficient number of people
01:37:51
working in the field and with a
01:37:55
very wide temporal range because we can
01:37:57
demonstrate that this species does meet
01:37:58
this population detective criterion
01:38:01
and should be cataloged and by virtue
01:38:04
of that cataloging probably the
01:38:05
objective is not to catalog but rather that this
01:38:07
species deserves
01:38:09
to be conserved deserves to be applied
01:38:12
direct conservation actions on
01:38:14
it and on its animals.
01:38:17
Another characteristic example is
01:38:20
the European turtle dove and not only these
01:38:25
charismatic species but also other
01:38:28
species that are good because we are making
01:38:29
this decline known, those
01:38:33
common species, not the swallow. the
01:38:35
shrike lions and so on. It's good that
01:38:38
they are disappearing. We can talk about
01:38:40
a broad geographical scale, but
01:38:42
we can also define in each region what
01:38:44
this decline is like because even there
01:38:46
are eclipse species that in
01:38:49
some of the regions are not
01:38:53
and well, what I mentioned
01:38:55
previously the usefulness of having
01:38:57
such long time series allows us to
01:39:00
understand the fluctuations much better
01:39:04
and even in other European countries in
01:39:06
which this program has been developed
01:39:08
long before, as we saw in the
01:39:10
previous presentation, the information
01:39:11
also allows a much greater analysis
01:39:15
here for For example, with the red partridge in
01:39:17
the Valencian community, since we could
01:39:19
speak from the year 98 to 2020 of a
01:39:23
certain stability of the population,
01:39:25
we are more or less in the
01:39:28
starting situation of that beginning year that is
01:39:31
considered the beginning for the analyzes
01:39:34
but really during Throughout this period,
01:39:36
the red partridge has first suffered an
01:39:38
increase or has experienced a fairly
01:39:41
large increase in its population. Subsequently, it has
01:39:44
experienced a few years of stability and in
01:39:46
recent years it has experienced a decline because
01:39:49
we cannot stop at considering what
01:39:51
the red partridge is in this case to give
01:39:53
an example in the Valencian community
01:39:55
remains stable but we can
01:39:57
have to say
01:39:58
in fact we say that we must be
01:40:00
alert because in the
01:40:02
last ten years this species is suffering a
01:40:04
decline that is not yet significant to
01:40:06
be considered professionally as
01:40:08
a species threatened
01:40:10
as vulnerable but we must
01:40:13
raise the alarm about
01:40:15
possibly in 23 years it could already be
01:40:18
considered a vulnerable species,
01:40:19
so we should not wait for
01:40:21
this species to meet the criteria
01:40:24
like others it shares its habitat,
01:40:26
but we can already begin to
01:40:29
focus on the urgent need to act on it
01:40:33
and then not only the information
01:40:37
obtained from virginia, we do not only work
01:40:41
with species, we can know how
01:40:45
the species that are grouped in
01:40:48
different types of habitats are doing,
01:40:50
obviously we all know the decline of
01:40:55
agricultural birds a certain stability
01:40:57
birds linked to bush environments
01:41:00
and an increase not
01:41:03
a moderate or even strong increase in
01:41:06
some areas of forest and urban birds
01:41:09
then we can obviously put
01:41:12
the focus on agricultural birds, as has already been said many times,
01:41:13
but not only that But
01:41:17
within all these agricultural environments
01:41:19
we can go into more detail about which ones
01:41:21
are the most threatened
01:41:25
and in this case not all
01:41:27
agricultural environments are in decline and the same, but
01:41:32
there are some that are
01:41:34
experiencing major breakdowns and those
01:41:36
that are It is necessary to act with greater
01:41:38
urgency in this sense. I also wanted
01:41:41
to comment that well, but these thousand
01:41:43
volunteers
01:41:44
who go out because they include me in the
01:41:47
field to participate in the program, they
01:41:50
think well, we are two minutes, two thousand
01:41:53
ears and a thousand brains that we are
01:41:56
also seeing what is happening in In the field, we
01:41:57
cannot transmit all this
01:41:58
information.
01:42:00
All of this obviously serves to influence
01:42:04
sectoral policies, especially
01:42:07
in issues related to agriculture,
01:42:10
which is possibly the environment in
01:42:13
which birds are showing a
01:42:14
greater decline and not only that but direct
01:42:17
study efforts and conservation of
01:42:19
species also as at the time
01:42:20
of development with the case of the turtle dove
01:42:23
but much more, many studies are also being done
01:42:25
with other
01:42:28
agricultural species with the royal charcoal such as the
01:42:30
partridge and the quail and all these
01:42:33
results that are being obtained in the
01:42:35
program is that in some way
01:42:37
they legitimize or also direct the need
01:42:40
to launch these studies not
01:42:43
only on our part but also on the part of
01:42:44
the administrations that must know
01:42:46
better how these habitats function
01:42:50
and what the real threats are on a
01:42:51
regional or global scale. to work
01:42:54
on them
01:42:56
and then also go into the detail of
01:42:59
understanding it or clarifying certain trends,
01:43:02
such as forest birds, for example,
01:43:04
it is a species that, to the extent that
01:43:07
the forest territory is increasing
01:43:08
throughout Spain, they are also seeing
01:43:12
positive trends, this again is
01:43:16
the trends of four
01:43:19
forest species the Valencian community
01:43:21
and all of them are experiencing
01:43:23
large increases but of course we cannot say
01:43:27
with this data alone that the
01:43:29
forest environments are in a good state of
01:43:30
conservation because the birds linked to
01:43:33
these environments are doing well but it
01:43:35
also has to qualify and All of these
01:43:36
species that are suitable are also
01:43:39
very generalist species, they are species closely
01:43:41
linked to
01:43:45
forest formations, some
01:43:47
pine forests and so on, while those that
01:43:49
depend more on those mosaics or those
01:43:51
more mature forests with other types of
01:43:53
formations. with lines
01:43:56
and well, those internal mosaics of
01:43:58
bushes and so on, such as the
01:44:01
lucas buntings and so on, because they are not doing
01:44:04
so well,
01:44:05
the fact of seeing an increase in
01:44:08
forest birds helps us,
01:44:11
we see that the forests are increasing,
01:44:14
but in the output, interpreting that this
01:44:16
increase is not It is necessarily positive, not
01:44:20
as if we did, it cannot have many
01:44:22
nuances
01:44:23
and finally,
01:44:27
this is all this information, it also
01:44:30
serves the administrations themselves
01:44:31
as a source, it is the
01:44:34
most solid and comprehensive source of information available for
01:44:36
all reports on the state of
01:44:38
conservation of Biodiversity is an
01:44:40
obligation of the administrations both
01:44:42
at the regional, national and international level,
01:44:47
then I will comment again on the
01:44:49
importance of the influence on
01:44:51
sectoral policies that the entire
01:44:52
program has for the definition of
01:44:56
sectoral policies because we are, for
01:44:57
example, in the In the case of birds and
01:44:59
insectivorous agricultural environments,
01:45:02
we are seeing that there is a program,
01:45:03
a problem that these birds are
01:45:05
indicating to us and that in fact the very
01:45:09
functioning of the shakhtar that we
01:45:11
are obtaining serves to
01:45:12
monitor these policies that
01:45:16
can be applied. being successful in
01:45:18
its application or not,
01:45:20
on the other hand, the program since it
01:45:23
is also an indicator of well-being,
01:45:24
we all know the multitude of
01:45:27
study information that exists on
01:45:29
how the fact that
01:45:33
salves do well is linked to an
01:45:36
indicator of social well-being or human,
01:45:39
on the other hand, evaluate the impact of
01:45:41
certain projects not only on a small
01:45:45
scale in places where
01:45:47
trends are available, as is the case in
01:45:50
some regions or some areas within
01:45:53
regional regions and so on, but on a large
01:45:56
scale, we have just seen the example of
01:45:59
how changing a
01:46:02
livestock system from grazing
01:46:05
cows
01:46:07
in an open system from extensive livestock farming
01:46:09
to a change from intensive livestock farming
01:46:11
can influence or lead
01:46:14
to major changes in
01:46:16
bird populations not only at a regional level but on a
01:46:18
large continental scale, well in summary, we
01:46:24
consider that information
01:46:28
is the main tool to be able to
01:46:30
conserve biodiversity and to the
01:46:33
extent that this program is importing,
01:46:35
it is providing an enormous amount of
01:46:38
information, it gives us a great capacity to
01:46:41
act and conserve all
01:46:43
scales of that local, regional
01:46:45
and national scale
01:46:48
and the more information we have, the
01:46:50
better, so we cannot be content with
01:46:52
having this great implementation and this
01:46:55
great participation of all of us.
01:46:57
Furthermore, each year we seek to
01:46:59
increase this participation because it will
01:47:01
generate even greater tools and greater
01:47:03
power to work in conservation
01:47:07
so nothing finally, thank you
01:47:09
[Music] for
01:47:11
participating in this webinar but
01:47:14
especially thank all the
01:47:16
participants
01:47:19
because these two thousand eyes 2000 ears that
01:47:22
are in the fields of this battalion of
01:47:23
volunteers
01:47:25
are providing all this information and
01:47:27
that they can also see how it
01:47:29
contributes to those haystack days,
01:47:32
those two mornings of having a good time
01:47:34
watching birds, how it can
01:47:36
effectively contribute to their conservation, so
01:47:40
many, many thanks to you and
01:47:43
Pablo, it's good, I was virtual chat on
01:47:48
YouTube, you can ask some questions
01:47:50
yes, in addition to those that have already been asked that
01:47:53
we have been answering and while
01:47:56
some more appear where we can thank
01:47:58
all the participants for our
01:48:00
intervention on websites to help
01:48:02
your contributions, thank you very much to
01:48:05
everyone
01:48:07
during the chat, a question arose
01:48:10
if from Portugal if all these
01:48:13
practices of each species are on
01:48:15
our website right now they have not
01:48:17
been and we are preparing a
01:48:20
new publication that is saved
01:48:21
on the breeding birds in Spain and they
01:48:24
are the guard
01:48:37
information 62 x will be available
01:48:40
through the internet
01:48:44
Some people have also commented that to
01:48:45
participate in this activity, how can they
01:48:48
do it, well, let everyone know that
01:48:51
there is an online application in addition to the
01:48:53
mobile application, a project seems to be mentioned
01:48:54
in the field called www points in everything
01:48:59
about birds point heretic and from that website
01:49:02
You can access all the forms of
01:49:04
monitoring we sacre You
01:49:05
can also see the instructions, the files
01:49:08
and how to participate and choose your space
01:49:11
where you want to participate so that it
01:49:12
stays in your reserved space and that we do not
01:49:14
duplicate ourselves, which then the
01:49:16
scientists will call our attention
01:49:17
because We ask questions about the
01:49:19
applications of these technical things that
01:49:21
they call and well, on that website
01:49:24
you will have all the information to lend
01:49:26
a hand and we remain open to any
01:49:31
question and any question you may
01:49:32
have about this matter
01:49:36
and although no questions appear we
01:49:41
will give it a couple of minutes someone else
01:49:42
if they want to ask and while I
01:49:44
also tell you that one thing
01:49:47
I mentioned to Gorka who gave us a
01:49:49
graph of the great ups and downs that
01:49:52
appeared in his film and that is normal
01:49:55
and he was referring to another that, as has already
01:49:58
happened in other situations in One of the
01:50:01
films that I participate in is
01:50:03
completely agricultural and perhaps that is the
01:50:06
reason why all the stations are
01:50:08
from agricultural environments where
01:50:12
what happens at the state level is so visually generalized,
01:50:15
so well, each one is the
01:50:18
graph that shows us value here. In what
01:50:20
is happening in your grid in the
01:50:21
mobile application, you will not only see the
01:50:24
stations or the routes in the queues,
01:50:27
two methods that can be participated
01:50:28
where you have to participate when it is
01:50:31
a space and when you participate in
01:50:33
several sample units you no longer
01:50:35
remember and I I stopped here if I stopped
01:50:37
there if I was going here or I finished my
01:50:39
journey there the mobile application
01:50:41
tells you the mobile application
01:50:43
allows you to enter the data very quickly
01:50:44
and the mobile application
01:50:45
what makes those graphs of what is
01:50:47
happening in your grid but
01:50:49
Obviously what happens in a
01:50:51
grid is not representative of the
01:50:54
national total - hence the great
01:50:55
importance that we need so many
01:50:57
participants so that we absorb the
01:51:00
information of what happens specifically
01:51:02
in each place, both at the autonomous community level
01:51:04
and at the state level as well as at the national level.
01:51:08
continent level as he told us
01:51:10
there and he already showed us how the
01:51:13
same species can have different
01:51:15
trends in different regions
01:51:19
for different reasons
01:51:21
because the evolution and
01:51:23
conservation problems of each
01:51:24
species are
01:51:26
normally not attributed to a single
01:51:29
variant. But there are many issues,
01:51:30
so well, we have to do the
01:51:33
work of many people to know
01:51:35
precisely what is happening and
01:51:38
extrapolate theft also to the
01:51:40
general situation and if it is true that there is a
01:51:42
very general situation on a continental scale, it is
01:51:45
actually happening in Spain.
01:51:50
where more species with
01:51:52
unfavorable declines are concentrated and this not
01:51:55
only because they give us
01:51:57
very good information as you have seen throughout
01:51:59
this exhibition to seek to identify
01:52:04
a priority in all our
01:52:06
conservation tasks on a national scale to an
01:52:08
international level from airlife and
01:52:11
on the other hand Well, they also allow us
01:52:15
from the administration to
01:52:16
identify and recognize this problem
01:52:18
as they have recognized it and
01:52:21
Brussels demands that they calculate this indicator
01:52:24
well so that the agrarian policy changes
01:52:27
and so that our management of the
01:52:29
territory is not so abusive, it is
01:52:32
directed at our own benefit
01:52:34
exclusively and yes also for our
01:52:37
own benefit because the well-being of
01:52:38
nature obviously
01:52:44
but if you allow me thank you well
01:52:48
I wanted to once again thank all the
01:52:52
speakers and all the attendees for their
01:52:55
interest in this initiative and
01:52:57
I especially want to convey the greeting
01:52:59
and the gratitude from our director
01:53:01
the solution ruiz who also had
01:53:03
a key role in the origin of
01:53:05
elsa I think she was not able to accompany us
01:53:07
on this occasion and I wanted to thank you on
01:53:11
her behalf for your participation and
01:53:13
assistance
01:53:14
and it has been very interesting the truth is
01:53:18
el sacre It is an overwhelming reality It is
01:53:21
tremendously useful information It
01:53:24
has shown very clear examples Gianni
01:53:26
Gracias of what is happening in Europe and
01:53:30
how we can and should better interpret
01:53:32
these data Maybe maybe of course
01:53:34
without forgetting the continuous generation
01:53:37
and updating of data We must also
01:53:39
focus more on the analysis of this
01:53:42
information of this very valuable
01:53:43
information already accumulated to be able to
01:53:46
apply intervene better in
01:53:49
specific conservation issues from the
01:53:50
cataloging of species that we
01:53:53
cannot stop at, as Pablo has very well said,
01:53:54
not only in cataloging but also that
01:53:56
conservation must be ensured. from
01:53:57
the same to
01:54:00
sectoral policies or others, not then that
01:54:03
finer analysis is to that concern
01:54:06
almost not to get more juice out of the
01:54:09
invaluable data of the sacré must be
01:54:11
something in which we have to make an
01:54:13
effort in the future and they are also
01:54:15
doing it in In that sense, many
01:54:18
of the scientists, organizations and
01:54:20
research institutions that are
01:54:22
taking advantage of these data to
01:54:24
obtain even better information and all of
01:54:27
this also contributes to consolidating the
01:54:29
usefulness and interest of the program.
01:54:31
Thank you
01:54:35
very much. Well, thank you very much
01:54:37
everyone. There is one last question and In case
01:54:42
any of you answer and
01:54:45
ask why the
01:54:47
sparrow is in decline,
01:54:50
I think there are numerous causes but
01:54:51
perhaps some of you want to detail it a
01:54:53
little more and with this we close and we
01:54:56
thank smart areas and
01:54:57
thousands of participants who have made
01:54:59
this possible. You have Some new
01:55:01
comment
01:55:08
and well, the cause of the decline of the
01:55:13
sparrow is, as Juan Carlos said, there are
01:55:15
many.
01:55:16
In fact, in science and especially in
01:55:19
mythology, we cannot balance the interrelationships
01:55:21
that the sparrow has with the terrestrial equal
01:55:23
when exposing with its environment, there is no
01:55:26
single answer
01:55:27
for On the one hand, the run is not a bird that is
01:55:31
considered a large bird, but during the
01:55:32
breeding season it needs a lot of
01:55:35
animal protein and to a large extent because it is one of
01:55:37
the great victims of the
01:55:41
collapse of insects, not of
01:55:44
invertebrates, both in agricultural environments.
01:55:47
As in how in cities, control of
01:55:50
the causes is the loss of
01:55:52
nesting places, this yes, higher capitation in
01:55:54
the part of cities,
01:55:56
urban centers due to restoration,
01:55:59
rehabilitation of housing, etc.
01:56:02
and well, there is also a part of
01:56:04
environmental pollution that influences
01:56:08
their state. physiological in its ability to
01:56:10
respond to its physiological stress, which has
01:56:14
also been shown to be much
01:56:15
greater in cities than
01:56:20
in agricultural or rural environments, which is why it
01:56:26
was declared bird of the year, which tells us
01:56:30
a lot about how We must live in
01:56:33
cities, it is not how we need
01:56:35
a healthy nature around us
01:56:38
to integrate nature conservation,
01:56:44
thank you very much Pablo, good for closing,
01:56:47
well, what has been said, thank you very much to all
01:56:50
the scales since you helped us get
01:56:53
this started at all. the state from not
01:56:56
only those of us who participate
01:56:57
directly in this work in the
01:56:59
back because all many people from
01:57:02
communication administration and from
01:57:04
all
01:57:05
the departments who have
01:57:06
contributed for so many years to this
01:57:09
activity, many thanks to the
01:57:12
autonomous communities that have collaborated
01:57:15
have already contributed and have recognized this
01:57:17
usefulness and for many years many have
01:57:19
supported it in a very very big way to the state
01:57:23
that in its day also supported fcc and ver
01:57:27
light that support this system on an
01:57:28
international scale and finally to all
01:57:31
the participants from the colors the
01:57:33
regional coordinators who are a
01:57:34
few dozen to the thousands of
01:57:37
participants who yes millions well this
01:57:38
would be impossible so thank you very much
01:57:41
for you
01:57:42
and see you in the next one
01:57:49
thank you very much to all thank you very much
01:57:51
your lady

Description:

Participantes Presenta y modera: Juan Carlos del Moral, coordinador de Ciencia Ciudadana de SEO/BirdLife. Programas de seguimiento en SEO/BirdLife y especial sacre en España, sistema de trabajo e implicación de los ornitólogos Maite Pelacho. Coordinadora del Observatorio de la ciencia ciudadana en España. Fundación Ibercivis. Ciencia Ciudadana en España Ramón Martí. Director de Desarrollo Institucional SEO/BirdLife. La llegada del programa Sacre a España Virginia Escandell. Coordinadora del Programa Sacre en España, participación, evolución y resultados Gorka Belamendia. Socio de SEO/BirdLife y Centro de Estudios Ambientales, Ayuntamiento de Vitoria-Gasteiz. Mis 25 años de experiencia en Sacre y apoyo a SEO/BirdLife. Voluntario del programa Sacre Jean-Yves Pasquet. Communications Officer Board EBCC y Responsable del Departemento de Estudios para Natagora (BirdLife en Belgica). Sacre en Europa y sus aportaciones Beatriz Arroyo. Investigadora científica del CSIC en el IREC. Importancia de los datos para la ciencia y las publicaciones científicas. Pablo Vera, Técnico de SEO/BirdLife. Delegación de SEO/BirdLife en la Comunitat Valenciana

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