This site uses cookies in order to function as expected. By continuing, you are agreeing to our cookie policy.
Agree and close

« May 2024 »
Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa Su
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31

HTML Document Poster 36: The contribution of leisure-time researchers to biodiversity research

J. BOSSELAERS1 and M. BOSSELAERS2

1 R. Novarumlaan 2, 2340 Beerse, hortipes@dochterland.org
2 mark.bosselaers@pi.be

Release date 24/08/2009

Leisure-time researchers can offer a valuable contribution to biodiversity studies in research areas like taxonomy, faunistics and floristics, ecology and conservation. Some groups of organisms (birds, butterflies...) enjoy a long tradition of leisure-time researcher study, other groups have been studied far less (arachnids, bryophytes...). Good leisure-time researchers can engage in field work, identification, collection management, species description. Some leisure-time researchers have produced inferior work impeding taxonomic progress or pursued commercial interests conflicting with science, but the majority are dedicated workers involving almost no labour cost. Collaboration of leisure-time researchers with scientific institutes is of prime importance in guaranteeing the quality of the work performed, the institutes offering training, follow-up, literature, loan of specimens, occasions for publication and use of equipment. On the other hand, leisure-time researchers can offer institutes valuable data, collections and joint publications. Membership of relevant naturalist societies is another prerequisite of good leisure-time research work in biodiversity. The "dochterland" group of three leisure-time researchers is briefly elaborated as an example, engaging in studies of spiders, pseudoscorpions, small butterflies, marine micromolluscs and fossil whales in collaboration with RBINS, MRAC and KULeuven.

logo CBD logo NFP Belgium logo RBINS