Which Species Are We Researching and Why? A Case Study of the Ecology of British Breeding Birds.

Our ecological knowledge base is extensive, but the motivations for research are many and varied, leading to unequal species representation and coverage. As this evidence is used to support a wide range of conservation, management and policy actions, it is important that gaps and biases are identifi...

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Main Authors: Ailsa J McKenzie, Peter A Robertson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4496060?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-dfebe96ac13a4dad82aae9763a21b27a2020-11-24T20:45:28ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01107e013100410.1371/journal.pone.0131004Which Species Are We Researching and Why? A Case Study of the Ecology of British Breeding Birds.Ailsa J McKenziePeter A RobertsonOur ecological knowledge base is extensive, but the motivations for research are many and varied, leading to unequal species representation and coverage. As this evidence is used to support a wide range of conservation, management and policy actions, it is important that gaps and biases are identified and understood. In this paper we detail a method for quantifying research effort and impact at the individual species level, and go on to investigate the factors that best explain between-species differences in outputs. We do this using British breeding birds as a case study, producing a ranked list of species based on two scientific publication metrics: total number of papers (a measure of research quantity) and h-index (a measure of the number of highly cited papers on a topic--an indication of research quality). Widespread, populous species which are native, resident and in receipt of biodiversity action plans produced significantly higher publication metrics. Guild was also significant, birds of prey the most studied group, with pigeons and doves the least studied. The model outputs for both metrics were very similar, suggesting that, at least in this example, research quantity and quality were highly correlated. The results highlight three key gaps in the evidence base, with fewer citations and publications relating to migrant breeders, introduced species and species which have experienced contractions in distribution. We suggest that the use of publication metrics in this way provides a novel approach to understanding the scale and drivers of both research quantity and impact at a species level and could be widely applied, both taxonomically and geographically.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4496060?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ailsa J McKenzie
Peter A Robertson
spellingShingle Ailsa J McKenzie
Peter A Robertson
Which Species Are We Researching and Why? A Case Study of the Ecology of British Breeding Birds.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Ailsa J McKenzie
Peter A Robertson
author_sort Ailsa J McKenzie
title Which Species Are We Researching and Why? A Case Study of the Ecology of British Breeding Birds.
title_short Which Species Are We Researching and Why? A Case Study of the Ecology of British Breeding Birds.
title_full Which Species Are We Researching and Why? A Case Study of the Ecology of British Breeding Birds.
title_fullStr Which Species Are We Researching and Why? A Case Study of the Ecology of British Breeding Birds.
title_full_unstemmed Which Species Are We Researching and Why? A Case Study of the Ecology of British Breeding Birds.
title_sort which species are we researching and why? a case study of the ecology of british breeding birds.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Our ecological knowledge base is extensive, but the motivations for research are many and varied, leading to unequal species representation and coverage. As this evidence is used to support a wide range of conservation, management and policy actions, it is important that gaps and biases are identified and understood. In this paper we detail a method for quantifying research effort and impact at the individual species level, and go on to investigate the factors that best explain between-species differences in outputs. We do this using British breeding birds as a case study, producing a ranked list of species based on two scientific publication metrics: total number of papers (a measure of research quantity) and h-index (a measure of the number of highly cited papers on a topic--an indication of research quality). Widespread, populous species which are native, resident and in receipt of biodiversity action plans produced significantly higher publication metrics. Guild was also significant, birds of prey the most studied group, with pigeons and doves the least studied. The model outputs for both metrics were very similar, suggesting that, at least in this example, research quantity and quality were highly correlated. The results highlight three key gaps in the evidence base, with fewer citations and publications relating to migrant breeders, introduced species and species which have experienced contractions in distribution. We suggest that the use of publication metrics in this way provides a novel approach to understanding the scale and drivers of both research quantity and impact at a species level and could be widely applied, both taxonomically and geographically.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4496060?pdf=render
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