Abstract
Cyberinfrastructures in ecology have coevolved alongside fields
excellent at expanding the landscape of big data acquisition. Arguably,
they offer better technological solutions for mobilising ‘born digital’
data (e.g. sensor technologies and citizen science), then they do for
low velocity, resource intensive ecological data which are inherently
tied to sociological and cultural constraints limiting sharing. Such
barriers can be summarised as trust, transparency and control,
fundamental properties on which blockchain technologies have been
prefiguratively designed. While this nascent decentralised ledger
technology (DLT) is receiving increasing attention among the sciences,
focus is yet to be directed at its potential utility to bolster open
ecological data. In this viewpoint we offer insight into how blockchain
technology could be leveraged to help normalise and incentivize open
ecological data and its potential to help culture a paradigm shift from
data proprietorship towards data stewardship.