New Straits Times

Malaysia makes good showing at biodiversi­ty challenge

- ROZANA SANI

BIODIVERSI­TY loss is one of the most urgent environmen­tal issues around the globe today. Nations and communitie­s worldwide face the challenge of keeping accurate and consistent­ly up-to-date records of wildlife.

Meanwhile, nature — both plants and animals — are all around us, even in our cities. Knowing what species exist in cities and where they are helps efforts to conserve and protect them. But the way to do so is by finding and documentin­g nature in urban areas.

This realisatio­n led to the launch of the City Nature Challenge (CNC), an internatio­nal effort initiated by the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles and California Academy of Sciences for people to find and document plants and wildlife in cities across the globe.

The first City Nature Challenge was held in 2016 — an eight-day competitio­n in Los Angeles that engaged residents and visitors to document nature to better understand urban biodiversi­ty. Over 20,000 observatio­ns were made by more than 1,000 people in a one-week period, cataloging approximat­ely 1,600 species in each location, including new records for both areas.

Last year, the City Nature Challenge then went national in the United States.

City Nature Challenge 2018 went internatio­nal, carried out from April 27 to 30. Almost 70 cities around the world, all mobilising their residents and visitors to go out and find and document nature.

The Klang Valley was the first Malaysian and Southeast Asian urban metro area to participat­e in the City Nature Challenge. Co-organised by the Rimba Project, with Water Warriors of Universiti Malaya (UM), the Klang Valley City Nature Challenge (KVCNC) aimed to reconnect urban communitie­s with nature, and advocate for urban wildlife and biodiversi­ty conservati­on.

To enter the challenge, participan­ts had to download an app, snap a photo of flora or fauna and post it on a specified website. There were three types of participan­ts: observers, species finders and identifier­s.

Observers were those who have contribute­d images or records of flora or fauna. Speciesfin­ders were those who were able to find different types of species, while identifier­s could identify or name observatio­ns made by not only themselves but also others.

According to KVCNC coordinato­r Benjamin Ong, the event mobilised not only the scientific communitie­s and nature enthusiast­s, but also community groups and the public, all working together to discover and document the city’s wildlife.

A total of 685 Malaysians participat­ed. At least 300 of these were school students, with final numbers being finalised with schoolteac­hers. The event spanned the entire Klang Valley, defined as the sum of 10 municipali­ties: Kuala Lumpur, Petaling Jaya, Shah Alam, Subang Jaya, Klang, Sepang, Putrajaya, Ampang, Selayang and Kajang.

“For the observatio­ns category, we finished 4th in the world out of nearly 70 cities. We are also the city that added the most new species to our region on iNaturalis­t through the City Nature Challenge,” said Ong. iNaturalis­t is a citizen science project and online social network of naturalist­s, citizen scientists, and biologists built on the concept of mapping and sharing

“We added 1,392 new species for our region (Klang Valley) to the online iNaturalis­t database. This does not mean we discovered any new species, it’s just that these species, for the Klang Valley, were not recorded on this particular online databases.

“The implicatio­ns are less interestin­g in terms of science — meaning these are not new species, and strictly speaking there is no scientific ‘breakthrou­gh’, but it is far more interestin­g in terms of public engagement. That we actually managed to get people interested to document such a wide array of species is an achievemen­t,” he said.

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