Abstract

Author(s): Pellicioli, Luca; Cimberio, Patrizia | Abstract: The Alpine ibex is one of the finest examples of how human’s attitude towards nature is changing by becoming aware of biodiversity conservation. On the 30th anniversary of the first Alpine ibex reintroduction in the Orobie Alps, a three year long Citizen Science Project started in June 2017 (‘Stambecco Orobie e Lombardia’). Nowadays, a complementary tool that can be used in data collection is citizen science; its use among scientific community is increasing and it is considered a new opportunity for the future of science. A three-year project (from 2017 to 2019) took place in the Orobie Alps (Bergamo, Italy), with the collection of 2,530 photographs of Alpine ibex (Capra ibex ibex). A total of 735 citizen scientists took part in the project by gathering data and collecting pictures (225 in 2017, 248 in 2018 and 262 in 2019). Photographs, complete with technical descriptions, were posted on the project’s Facebook page and the Instagram page and each one was georeferenced on the ArcGis platform and a web mapping application. The georeferenced images helped comparing the expansion zones of Lombard Alpine ibex colonies to the ones identified in a preliminary study. The images also turned out to be a useful tool in monitoring population health. These methods may help to avoid data dispersion and may raise public awareness of Alpine ibex conservation policies.n

Highlights

  • On the 30th anniversary of the first Alpine ibex reintroduction in the Orobie Alps, a three year long Citizen Science Project started in June 2017 (‘Stambecco Orobie e Lombardia’)

  • A complementary tool that can be used in data collection is citizen science; its use among scientific community is increasing and it is considered a new opportunity for the future of science

  • Photographs, complete with technical descriptions, were posted on the project’s Facebook page and the Instagram page and each one was georeferenced on the ArcGis platform and a web mapping application

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Summary

Introduction

The return of the Alpine ibex Capra ibex ibex Linnaeus, 1758, to the Alps began at the end of the 19th Century thanks to the pioneering and visionary Swiss reintroduction project and it represented a major success for nature protection in Europe (Giacometti, 2006). In the early 1980s, a small ibex population was still present in the Italian Alps (Peracino and Bassano, 1989). For this reason, the Lombardy Region started an extraordinary Alpine ibex restocking plan named "Progetto Stambecco Lombardia" (Tosi et al, 1989). The project began in 1987, with the first release program in Alta Val Seriana (Bergamo – Italy) and ended in the same area in May 1990 with the reintroduction of 87 individuals of Alpine ibex (Tosi et al, 2012). Twenty years later, according to a census carried out in summer 2008, 1,026 ibex were present in the Orobie Alps (Gagliardi and Tosi, 2012)

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