open access publication

Article, 2024

Fair concordance between Google Trends and Danish ornithologists in the assessment of temporal trends in Danish bird populations highlights the informational value of big data

Environmental Monitoring and Assessment, ISSN 1573-2959, 0167-6369, Volume 196, 3, Page 276, 10.1007/s10661-024-12439-y

Contributors

Jensen, Per Moestrup 0000-0001-8792-7711 (Corresponding author) [1] Danielsen, Finn 0000-0003-0229-2847 [2] Jacobsen, Stine Kramer 0000-0002-0986-5639 [1] Vikstrøm, Thomas [3]

Affiliations

  1. [1] University of Copenhagen
  2. [NORA names: KU University of Copenhagen; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  3. [2] Nordisk Fond for Miljø og Udvikling
  4. [NORA names: Miscellaneous; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  5. [3] DOF/BirdLife Denmark, Vesterbrogade 140A, 1620, Copenhagen V, Denmark
  6. [NORA names: Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

The ongoing depletion of natural systems and associated biodiversity decline is of growing international concern. Climate change is expected to exacerbate anthropogenic impacts on wild populations. The scale of impact on ecosystems and ecosystem services will be determined by the impact on a multitude of species and functional groups, which due to their biology and numbers are difficult to monitor. The IPCC has argued that surveillance or monitoring is critical and proposed that monitoring systems should be developed, which not only track developments but also function as “early warning systems.” Human populations are already generating large continuous datasets on multiple taxonomic groups through internet searches. These time series could in principle add substantially to current monitoring if they reflect true changes in the natural world. We here examined whether information on internet search frequencies delivered by the Danish population and captured by Google Trends (GT) appropriately informs on population trends in 106 common Danish bird species. We compared the internet search activity with independent equivalent population trend assessments from the Danish Ornithological Society (BirdLife Denmark/DOF). We find a fair concordance between the GT trends and the assessments by DOF. A substantial agreement can be obtained by omitting species without clear temporal trends. Our findings suggest that population trend proxies from internet search frequencies can be used to supplement existing wildlife population monitoring and to ask questions about an array of ecological phenomena, which potentially can be integrated into an early warning system for biodiversity under climate change.

Keywords

DOF, Danish, Danish population, Google, Google Trends, IPCC, Internet, Internet search, Internet search activity, Internet search frequency, activity, agreement, anthropogenic impacts, array, assessment, assessment of temporal trends, big data, biodiversity, biodiversity decline, biology, bird populations, bird species, changes, climate, climate change, concerns, concordance, data, dataset, decline, depletion, development, early warning system, ecological phenomena, ecosystem, ecosystem services, fair concordance, findings, frequency, functional groups, group, human population, impact, information, information value, international concern, monitoring, monitoring system, natural systems, natural world, number, ornithologists, phenomenon, population, population monitoring, population trends, proxies, questions, search, search activity, search frequency, series, services, species, substantial agreement, surveillance, system, taxonomic groups, temporal trends, time, time series, trend assessment, trends, value of big data, warning system, wild populations, wildlife, wildlife population monitoring, world

Funders

  • Danish Agency for Science and Higher Education
  • European Commission

Data Provider: Digital Science