About this Research Topic
DT has had an impact upon people's relationship with wildlife species across a variety of dimensions and has helped to put new information about them into the public domain, chiefly through media representations. A range of smartphone applications can now support everyday encounters with wildlife by resourcing recognition, identification and the provision of information about wildlife species. Social media further supports the sharing of stories of encounters with wildlife in various ways. DT is implicated in the support of visitor and touristic encounters with animals in nature reserves and at visitor centres and non-experts now use DT to gather data about the movement and density of animal populations that can feed into conservation efforts. People also share data with scientists that help to enrich understanding of animal habitats. Beyond this, DT also plays a role in conservation activism, including efforts to reduce HWC. Lastly, DT has also had a huge impact on research and science, where it has enabled new ways of seeing and new forms of research on wildlife. At the same time, the widespread capture of wildlife data can bring with it issues, such as the reliability of the data providers, the incorrect identification of species, and potential misunderstanding of species behaviour and interactions. Poor data reliability can also result from tracking and monitoring technology impinging on animal welfare and altering the very behaviours and interactions that the technology is intended to capture. The consequences of gathering sensitive data on animals also need to be considered, including potential data security risks, whereby data collected for conservation purposes could be stolen and misused. Mitigating these risks highlights the importance of designing and deploying technological interventions that take into account the needs of animal stakeholders.
This Research Topic seeks to bring together a collection of papers that explore the impact digital technology can have upon the relationship between people and all forms of wildlife, for good and for bad, in different contexts and to identify the many challenges that still remain and the efforts being made to address them.
We are looking for full research papers, shorter position pieces and perspective articles, and even more creative or experimental contributions that seek to address and explore various aspects of the role being played by DT in Human-Wildlife Interaction (HWI) and how it can have an impact, including:
- Wildlife-related (citizen) science and approaches for verifying and validating data received by Citizen Science schemes;
- The impact of the design of DT on gathering wildlife-related data and related interventions
- The use of social media in relation to wildlife and the related harvesting of data;
- The role played by DT in promoting information about wildlife in rural and urban areas;
- The public use of wildlife-related apps and their impact;
- The use of DT by wildlife experts and organisations to promote public engagement;
- DT and wildlife activism;
- How DT enables conservation, stewardship or caretaking of wildlife and how it supports wildlife welfare and wellbeing;
- The role played by DT in ameliorating HWC;
- DT and the development of wildlife-related public policy;
- The impact DT has had on human relationships to other wildlife.
Keywords: Conservation, Digital Technology, Human-Wildlife Conflict, Animal Activism, Wildlife, Human-Wildlife Interaction, Citizen Science
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.