PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Vijay V. Barve AU - Laura Brenskelle AU - Daijiang Li AU - Brian J. Stucky AU - Narayani V. Barve AU - Maggie M. Hantak AU - Bryan S. McLean AU - Daniel J. Paluh AU - Jessica A. Oswald AU - Michael Belitz AU - Ryan Folk AU - Robert Guralnick TI - Methods for broad-scale plant phenology assessments using citizen scientists’ photographs AID - 10.1101/754275 DP - 2019 Jan 01 TA - bioRxiv PG - 754275 4099 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/09/01/754275.short 4100 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/09/01/754275.full AB - Broad-scale plant flowering phenology data has predominantly come from geographically and taxonomically restricted monitoring networks. However, platforms such as iNaturalist, where citizen scientists upload photographs and curate identifications, provide a promising new source of data. Here we develop a general set of best practices for scoring iNaturalist digital records supporting downstream re-use in phenology studies. We focus on a case study group, Yucca, because it has showy flowers and is well documented on iNaturalist. Additionally, drivers of Yucca phenology are not well-understood despite need for Yucca to synchronize flowering with obligate moth pollinators. Finally, evidence of anomalous flowering events have been recently reported, but the extent of those events is unknown. We use best-practices approach to annotate nearly 9,000 Yucca iNaturalist records, and compare the spatiotemporal coverage of this dataset with other broad-scale monitoring resources. Our findings demonstrate that iNaturalist provides unique phenology information, including delineation of extents of unusual flowering events. We also determine if unusual early flowering events impact later, typical flowering periods. Finally, we adapt a plant phenology global knowledge-store to integrate iNaturalist annotation results, supporting broadest reuse. Our approach has application to other plant groups, leveraging rapidly increasing data resources from iNaturalist to study phenology.