Biodiversity data as public environmental media: Citizen science projects, national databases and data visualizations
Date
2021-03-01
Authors
Whitelaw, Mitchell
Smaill, Belinda
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Publisher
Intellect Ltd.
Abstract
Through a combination of scientific and community activity, our environment is increasingly registered and documented as data. Given the expanding breadth of this digital domain, it is crucial that scholars consider the problems it presents as well as its affirmative potential. This article, arising from collaboration between a practitioner and theorist in digital design and a film and screen scholar with expertise in documentary and environmental studies, critically examines biodiversity data through an ecocritical reading of public-facing databases, citizen science platforms and data visualizations. We examine the Atlas of Living Australia; Canberra Nature Map; the City of Melbourne's Insects; and the experimental visualization Local Kin. Integrating perspectives from screen studies, design and the environmental humanities, including multispecies studies approaches in anthropology, we examine how digital representations reflect the way biodiversity data is produced and structured. Critically analysing design choices ‐ what is shown, and how it is shown ‐ we argue that biodiversity data on-screen provides specific affordances: allowing, encouraging or discouraging certain insights and possibilities that condition our knowledge of and engagement with living things. An interdisciplinary approach allows us to ask new questions about how users might experience multispecies worlds in digital form, and how biodiversity data might convey the complexities of an entangled biosphere, amplifying understanding, connection and attention amongst interested publics. We examine the visual rhetorics of digital biodiversity in order to better understand how these forms operate as environmental media: designed representations of the living world.
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Keywords
biodiversity, data, visualization, multispecies, Australia, citizen science
Citation
Whitelaw, Mitchell and Smaill, Belinda (2021), ‘Biodiversity data as public environmental media: Citizen science projects, national databases and data visualizations’, Journal of Environmental Media, 2:1, pp. 79–99, doi: https://doi.org/10.1386/jem_00027_1
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Source
Journal of Environmental Media
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Journal article
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Open Access
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