Bret Collier, Anna Knipps, Jeff Levengood, Ashley Tunstall
{"title":"科学基础与公报","authors":"Bret Collier, Anna Knipps, Jeff Levengood, Ashley Tunstall","doi":"10.1002/wsb.1503","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>I try to teach a graduate seminar on wildlife population dynamics at least once a year. In that class, I ask the students what papers they think had the greatest impact on wildlife ecology and management. I typically get a laundry list of works on whatever the fancy new statistical method is for estimating a demographic, space use, a genetic parameter or what not and as expected; suggestions tend to skew towards the individual students field of study/interest. While I am certain that all of the papers suggested are good papers, I often wonder about what impact those papers really have on conservation and management? Do they represent complete paradigm shifts that cause our field to entirely rethink our past and our future approaches to how we collect conservation data, or do they just represent a refinement to an extra decimal place of a more general approach we already use?</p>\n<p>In context, I was looking at papers from the <i>Wildlife Society Bulletin</i> while I was at The Wildlife Society's Annual Conference in Louisville. I realized during that review that <i>Wildlife Society Bulletin</i> papers have been the archetype of paradigms in wildlife conservation and management. I think about the paper by Johnson et al. (<span>2001</span>) on <i>Statistics for wildlifers: how much and what kind?</i> and the influence that had on graduate students (including myself) interested in statistical ecology. What about Hunter (<span>1989</span>), who in 2 pages on <i>Aardvarks and Arcadia: two principles of wildlife research</i> detailed for graduate students the importance of hypotheses and the need to consider larger questions at broader scales? And of course, there is Anderson (<span>2001</span>) on <i>The need to get the basics right in wildlife field studies</i>, which I would argue in 4 pages represents the generality (sensu Dunham and Beaupre <span>1998</span>) on which many subsequent papers focused on estimating <i>p</i> and increasing the accuracy of population parameter estimates, or those that the students always recommend to me as having the greatest impact.</p>\n<p>I bring up these papers to point out that the <i>Wildlife Society Bulletin</i> is the wildlife conservation and management journal on which our field relies (perhaps unknowingly) heavily on, a fact that hit me full on at the TWS meeting this year. In support of my contention, I wanted to point out a simple number that I think encapsulates the reach of the Bulletin over the last several years. In 2018, the <i>Bulletin</i> had approximately 60,000 downloads (meaning 60 K downloads of <i>Bulletin</i> papers occurred), but, since the transition to Open Access in 2022, as of November 2023 we are at 147,000 downloads. Impact cannot be measured just in a ranking of a journal, but on the use of the content within that journal for conservation and management.</p>\n<p>I do want to continue to remind everyone that the <i>Wildlife Society Bulletin</i> would not be what it is today if not for the hard work and efforts of the <i>Wildlife Society Bulletin's</i> Associate Editors. Being an Associate Editor is a truly rewarding experience, and if any of our readers would like to join our Associate Editor board, please feel free to contact me directly to discuss.</p>\n<p>I would, as always, be remiss if I did not thank Dr. Anna Knipps, Dr. Jeff Levengood, and Ms. Ashley Tunstall from the <i>Wildlife Society Bulletin</i> staff, as their support behind the scenes running the <i>Wildlife Society Bulletin</i> is one of reasons that the <i>Bulletin</i> has been successful. I also wanted to note that Ms. Tunstall recently graduated and has accepted a biologist position with Ducks Unlimited, and we here at the <i>Bulletin</i> wish her well! Finally, I continue to echo my previous calls to all readers and authors of the <i>Wildlife Society Bulletin</i>. If you are contacted to be a referee, please accept, as the expenditure of your time on others' work will support the expenditure of others' time on your work.</p>","PeriodicalId":23845,"journal":{"name":"Wildlife Society Bulletin","volume":"53 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":1.5000,"publicationDate":"2023-12-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Science Foundations and the Bulletin\",\"authors\":\"Bret Collier, Anna Knipps, Jeff Levengood, Ashley Tunstall\",\"doi\":\"10.1002/wsb.1503\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>I try to teach a graduate seminar on wildlife population dynamics at least once a year. In that class, I ask the students what papers they think had the greatest impact on wildlife ecology and management. I typically get a laundry list of works on whatever the fancy new statistical method is for estimating a demographic, space use, a genetic parameter or what not and as expected; suggestions tend to skew towards the individual students field of study/interest. While I am certain that all of the papers suggested are good papers, I often wonder about what impact those papers really have on conservation and management? Do they represent complete paradigm shifts that cause our field to entirely rethink our past and our future approaches to how we collect conservation data, or do they just represent a refinement to an extra decimal place of a more general approach we already use?</p>\\n<p>In context, I was looking at papers from the <i>Wildlife Society Bulletin</i> while I was at The Wildlife Society's Annual Conference in Louisville. I realized during that review that <i>Wildlife Society Bulletin</i> papers have been the archetype of paradigms in wildlife conservation and management. I think about the paper by Johnson et al. (<span>2001</span>) on <i>Statistics for wildlifers: how much and what kind?</i> and the influence that had on graduate students (including myself) interested in statistical ecology. What about Hunter (<span>1989</span>), who in 2 pages on <i>Aardvarks and Arcadia: two principles of wildlife research</i> detailed for graduate students the importance of hypotheses and the need to consider larger questions at broader scales? And of course, there is Anderson (<span>2001</span>) on <i>The need to get the basics right in wildlife field studies</i>, which I would argue in 4 pages represents the generality (sensu Dunham and Beaupre <span>1998</span>) on which many subsequent papers focused on estimating <i>p</i> and increasing the accuracy of population parameter estimates, or those that the students always recommend to me as having the greatest impact.</p>\\n<p>I bring up these papers to point out that the <i>Wildlife Society Bulletin</i> is the wildlife conservation and management journal on which our field relies (perhaps unknowingly) heavily on, a fact that hit me full on at the TWS meeting this year. In support of my contention, I wanted to point out a simple number that I think encapsulates the reach of the Bulletin over the last several years. In 2018, the <i>Bulletin</i> had approximately 60,000 downloads (meaning 60 K downloads of <i>Bulletin</i> papers occurred), but, since the transition to Open Access in 2022, as of November 2023 we are at 147,000 downloads. Impact cannot be measured just in a ranking of a journal, but on the use of the content within that journal for conservation and management.</p>\\n<p>I do want to continue to remind everyone that the <i>Wildlife Society Bulletin</i> would not be what it is today if not for the hard work and efforts of the <i>Wildlife Society Bulletin's</i> Associate Editors. Being an Associate Editor is a truly rewarding experience, and if any of our readers would like to join our Associate Editor board, please feel free to contact me directly to discuss.</p>\\n<p>I would, as always, be remiss if I did not thank Dr. Anna Knipps, Dr. Jeff Levengood, and Ms. Ashley Tunstall from the <i>Wildlife Society Bulletin</i> staff, as their support behind the scenes running the <i>Wildlife Society Bulletin</i> is one of reasons that the <i>Bulletin</i> has been successful. I also wanted to note that Ms. Tunstall recently graduated and has accepted a biologist position with Ducks Unlimited, and we here at the <i>Bulletin</i> wish her well! Finally, I continue to echo my previous calls to all readers and authors of the <i>Wildlife Society Bulletin</i>. If you are contacted to be a referee, please accept, as the expenditure of your time on others' work will support the expenditure of others' time on your work.</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":23845,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Wildlife Society Bulletin\",\"volume\":\"53 1\",\"pages\":\"\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":1.5000,\"publicationDate\":\"2023-12-18\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Wildlife Society Bulletin\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"93\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.1002/wsb.1503\",\"RegionNum\":4,\"RegionCategory\":\"环境科学与生态学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q3\",\"JCRName\":\"Environmental Science\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Wildlife Society Bulletin","FirstCategoryId":"93","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1002/wsb.1503","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"环境科学与生态学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"Environmental Science","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
我尝试每年至少教授一次野生动物种群动态研究生研讨会。在课堂上,我会问学生他们认为对野生动物生态学和管理影响最大的论文是什么。我通常会收到一份作品清单,内容都是关于估算人口、空间利用、遗传参数或其他方面的花哨的新统计方法,不出所料,学生们的建议往往偏向于个人的研究领域/兴趣。虽然我确信所有推荐的论文都是好论文,但我经常想知道这些论文对保护和管理到底有什么影响?它们是否代表了完全的范式转变,导致我们的领域完全重新思考我们过去和未来如何收集保护数据的方法,或者它们只是代表了我们已经使用的更普遍方法的小数点后一位的改进?在查阅过程中,我意识到《野生动物学会公报》的论文一直是野生动物保护和管理范例的原型。我想起了约翰逊等人(2001 年)撰写的论文《野生动物的统计:多少和什么样的统计》,以及这篇论文对对统计生态学感兴趣的研究生(包括我自己)产生的影响。亨特(Hunter,1989 年)在《土豚与阿卡迪亚:野生动物研究的两个原则》一文中用两页纸为研究生详细介绍了假设的重要性以及在更大范围内考虑更大问题的必要性。当然,还有安德森(Anderson,2001 年)的《在野生动物野外研究中做好基础工作的必要性》(The need to get the basics right in wildlife field studies),我认为这篇长达 4 页的论文代表了一种普遍性(sensu Dunham and Beaupre,1998 年),在这种普遍性的基础上,后来的许多论文都侧重于估计 p 和提高种群参数估计的准确性,或者说学生们总是向我推荐那些影响最大的论文。我提到这些论文是想指出,《野生动物学会简报》是我们这个领域非常依赖的野生动物保护和管理期刊(也许是在不知不觉中),这一事实在今年的野生动物学会会议上让我深有感触。为了支持我的论点,我想指出一个简单的数字,我认为它概括了《公报》过去几年的影响力。2018 年,《公报》的下载量约为 6 万次(即《公报》论文的下载量为 6 万次),但自 2022 年过渡到开放获取以来,截至 2023 年 11 月,我们的下载量已达到 14.7 万次。我想继续提醒大家,如果没有《野生动物学会简报》副主编们的辛勤工作和努力,《野生动物学会简报》就不会有今天。如果有读者想加入我们的副主编委员会,请随时直接与我联系商讨。如果我没有一如既往地感谢野生动物学会简报的工作人员 Anna Knipps 博士、Jeff Levengood 博士和 Ashley Tunstall 女士,那将是我的失职,因为他们在幕后对野生动物学会简报的支持是简报取得成功的原因之一。我还想指出,Tunstall 女士最近毕业并接受了 Ducks Unlimited 的生物学家职位,我们在 Bulletin 祝愿她一切顺利!最后,我再次呼吁《野生动物协会简报》的所有读者和作者。如果有人联系您担任推荐人,请接受,因为您在他人作品上花费的时间将支持他人在您作品上花费的时间。
I try to teach a graduate seminar on wildlife population dynamics at least once a year. In that class, I ask the students what papers they think had the greatest impact on wildlife ecology and management. I typically get a laundry list of works on whatever the fancy new statistical method is for estimating a demographic, space use, a genetic parameter or what not and as expected; suggestions tend to skew towards the individual students field of study/interest. While I am certain that all of the papers suggested are good papers, I often wonder about what impact those papers really have on conservation and management? Do they represent complete paradigm shifts that cause our field to entirely rethink our past and our future approaches to how we collect conservation data, or do they just represent a refinement to an extra decimal place of a more general approach we already use?
In context, I was looking at papers from the Wildlife Society Bulletin while I was at The Wildlife Society's Annual Conference in Louisville. I realized during that review that Wildlife Society Bulletin papers have been the archetype of paradigms in wildlife conservation and management. I think about the paper by Johnson et al. (2001) on Statistics for wildlifers: how much and what kind? and the influence that had on graduate students (including myself) interested in statistical ecology. What about Hunter (1989), who in 2 pages on Aardvarks and Arcadia: two principles of wildlife research detailed for graduate students the importance of hypotheses and the need to consider larger questions at broader scales? And of course, there is Anderson (2001) on The need to get the basics right in wildlife field studies, which I would argue in 4 pages represents the generality (sensu Dunham and Beaupre 1998) on which many subsequent papers focused on estimating p and increasing the accuracy of population parameter estimates, or those that the students always recommend to me as having the greatest impact.
I bring up these papers to point out that the Wildlife Society Bulletin is the wildlife conservation and management journal on which our field relies (perhaps unknowingly) heavily on, a fact that hit me full on at the TWS meeting this year. In support of my contention, I wanted to point out a simple number that I think encapsulates the reach of the Bulletin over the last several years. In 2018, the Bulletin had approximately 60,000 downloads (meaning 60 K downloads of Bulletin papers occurred), but, since the transition to Open Access in 2022, as of November 2023 we are at 147,000 downloads. Impact cannot be measured just in a ranking of a journal, but on the use of the content within that journal for conservation and management.
I do want to continue to remind everyone that the Wildlife Society Bulletin would not be what it is today if not for the hard work and efforts of the Wildlife Society Bulletin's Associate Editors. Being an Associate Editor is a truly rewarding experience, and if any of our readers would like to join our Associate Editor board, please feel free to contact me directly to discuss.
I would, as always, be remiss if I did not thank Dr. Anna Knipps, Dr. Jeff Levengood, and Ms. Ashley Tunstall from the Wildlife Society Bulletin staff, as their support behind the scenes running the Wildlife Society Bulletin is one of reasons that the Bulletin has been successful. I also wanted to note that Ms. Tunstall recently graduated and has accepted a biologist position with Ducks Unlimited, and we here at the Bulletin wish her well! Finally, I continue to echo my previous calls to all readers and authors of the Wildlife Society Bulletin. If you are contacted to be a referee, please accept, as the expenditure of your time on others' work will support the expenditure of others' time on your work.
期刊介绍:
The Wildlife Society Bulletin is a journal for wildlife practitioners that effectively integrates cutting edge science with management and conservation, and also covers important policy issues, particularly those that focus on the integration of science and policy. Wildlife Society Bulletin includes articles on contemporary wildlife management and conservation, education, administration, law enforcement, and review articles on the philosophy and history of wildlife management and conservation. This includes:
Reports on practices designed to achieve wildlife management or conservation goals.
Presentation of new techniques or evaluation of techniques for studying or managing wildlife.
Retrospective analyses of wildlife management and conservation programs, including the reasons for success or failure.
Analyses or reports of wildlife policies, regulations, education, administration, law enforcement.
Review articles on the philosophy and history of wildlife management and conservation. as well as other pertinent topics that are deemed more appropriate for the Wildlife Society Bulletin than for The Journal of Wildlife Management.
Book reviews that focus on applied research, policy or wildlife management and conservation.