Biodiversity Data Journal (Oct 2022)

Revealing the millipede and other soil-macrofaunal biodiversity in Hong Kong using a citizen science approach

  • Wai Lok So,
  • Ka Wai Ting,
  • Sheung Yee Lai,
  • Elaine Yi Ying Huang,
  • Yue Ma,
  • Tze Kiu Chong,
  • Ho Yin Yip,
  • Hoi Ting Lee,
  • Billy Chun Ting Cheung,
  • Man Ka Chan,
  • Hong Kong Soil Biodiversity Consortium,
  • Wenyan Nong,
  • Michelle Man Suet Law,
  • Derrick Yuk Fo Lai,
  • Jerome Ho Lam Hui

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3897/BDJ.10.e82518
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10
pp. 1 – 21

Abstract

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Soil biodiversity plays important roles in nutrient recycling in both the environment and agriculture. However, they are generally understudied worldwide. To reveal the diversity of soil macrofauna in Hong Kong, here we initiated a citizen science project involving university, non-governmental organisations and secondary school students and teachers. It is envisioned that the citizen science approach used in this study could be used as a demonstration to future biodiversity sampling and monitoring studies.Throughout a year of monitoring and species sampling across different localities in Hong Kong, 150 soil macrofaunal morphospecies were collected. Eighty five of them were further identified by morphology and DNA barcoding was assigned to each identified morphospecies, yielding a total of 646 DNA barcodes, with new millipede sequences deposited to the GenBank. The soil macrofauna morphospecies in Hong Kong found in this study are mainly dominated by millipedes (23 out of 150) and oligochaetes (15 out of 150). Amongst the twenty three identified millipedes, two polyxenid millipedes, Monographis queenslandica Huynh & Veenstra, 2013 and Alloproctoides remyi Marquet and Condé, 1950 are first recorded in Hong Kong. Information has been curated on an online platform and database (http://biodiversity.sls.cuhk.edu.hk/millipedes). A postcard summarising the findings of millipedes in Hong Kong has also been made as a souvenir and distributed to citizen participants. The identified macrofauna morphospecies and their 646 DNA barcodes in this study established a solid foundation for further research in soil biodiversity.

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