# Buscando Luciérnagas: findings on Mexican fireflies from an 8-year virtual citizen science project

**Authors:** Ek del-Val, Ana M. Flores-Gutiérrez, Regina González, Adrián Calleros

PMC · DOI: 10.7717/peerj.18141 · PeerJ · 2024-09-18

## TL;DR

A 7-year citizen science project tracked firefly sightings in Mexico, revealing patterns in their distribution and habitats.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates how virtual citizen science can collect ecological data on fireflies and promote conservation.

## Key findings

- Most firefly sightings occurred in central Mexico, with grasslands and forests being the most common habitats.
- Urban areas also had notable firefly sightings, suggesting potential for urban ecology research.
- The number of reports varied yearly, correlating with publicity efforts and changes in reporting format.

## Abstract

Fireflies are charismatic and conspicuous animals that often evoke childhood memories, which make firefly watching an emotional and even transformative experience. Citizen science projects have the potential to enhance transformative interactions with nature. Like many insects, firefly populations are declining due to land-use change, urbanization and watershed pollution, but ecological data for this group is scarce, particularly in Mexico. Virtual Citizen Science (VCS) initiatives can serve as a scientific instrument, yield reliable and relevant scientific data, and may also offer a platform to promote broader educational outcomes. We established a VCS project to document fireflies through a Facebook page named Buscando Luciernagas with the following hashtag in every post #veobrillar in 2015. After seven years we complied the gathered data and analyzed the results. We had 647 reports in total, with strong fluctuations from year to year that were correlated with the number of posts and publicity we made each year. The largest number of sightings (319) occurred in 2021, coinciding with a change in our reporting format. Most of the reports came from central Mexico (91.5%), but we had reports from eight states and also received some international reports from nine different countries. Fireflies were most frequently seen in habitats characterized as grasslands (35%) or forests (27%), followed by gardens (17%), vacant lots (9%) and parks (5%) but also paved areas and agricultural lands were reported (3% each). Most citizen scientists reported few fireflies, 1–5 individuals (31%) while only 11% reported more than 50 fireflies per sighting. Our study can serve as a preliminary approach to explore more focused research areas in the future. For example, in areas with no sightings, we could reach out to specific local people to corroborate that there are no fireflies in the region, or in areas with high sightings we could promote conservation measures. Notably, we found it intriguing to discover numerous sightings of fireflies in urban areas, which could offer a potential avenue for further research in urban ecology.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

45 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11416087/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11416087