Published March 10, 2022 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Toward an atlas of Salish Sea biodiversity: the flora and fauna of Galiano Island, British Columbia, Canada. Part I. Marine zoology

  • 1. Institute for Multidisciplinary Ecological Research in the Salish Sea, Galiano Island, Canada
  • 2. Institute for Multidisciplinary Ecological Research in the Salish Sea, Galiano Island, Canada|University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada
  • 3. University of Victoria, Victoria, Canada
  • 4. Royal British Columbia Museum, Victoria, Canada
  • 5. Port Orchard 98366, Port Orchard, United States of America
  • 6. Pacific Marine Life Surveys, Port Coquitlam, Canada
  • 7. 7494 Andrea Cres, Lantzville, Canada
  • 8. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, Los Angeles, United States of America
  • 9. Institute for Multidisciplinary Ecological Research in the Salish Sea, Galiano Island, Canada|University of Victoria, Victoria, Canada
  • 10. McDaniel Photography, Vancouver, Canada
  • 11. Ocean Wise, Vancouver, Canada

Description

Based on records dating from 1859 to 2021, we provide an overview of the marine animal diversity reported for Galiano Island, British Columbia, Canada. More than 650 taxa are represented by 20,000 species occurrence records in this curated dataset, which includes dive records documented through the Pacific Marine Life Surveys, museum voucher specimens, ecological data and crowd-sourced observations from the BC Cetacean Sightings Network and iNaturalist.

We describe Galiano Island's marine animal diversity in relation to the Salish Sea's overall biodiversity and quantify the proportional contributions of different types of sampling effort to our current local knowledge. Overviews are provided for each taxonomic group in a format intended to be accessible to amateur naturalists interested in furthering research into the region's marine biodiversity. In summary, we find that the Pacific Marine Life Surveys, a regional community science diving initiative, account for 60% of novel records reported for Galiano Island. Voucher specimens account for 19% and crowd-sourced biodiversity data 18% of novel records, respectively, with the remaining 3% of reports coming from other sources. These findings shed light on the complementarity of different types of sampling effort and demonstrate the potential for community science to contribute to the global biodiversity research community. We present a biodiversity informatics framework that is designed to enable these practices by supporting collaboration among researchers and communities in the collection, curation and dissemination of biodiversity data.

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