Jonathan J Choi, Leo C Gaskins, Joseph P Morton, Julia A Bingham, Ashley M Blawas, Christine Hayes, Carmen Hoyt, Patrick N Halpin, Brian Silliman
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To explore this mismatch, we looked at federal implementation of the United States Endangered Species Act (ESA), which requires the use of the \"best available science\" to list a species as endangered or threatened and thus receive powerful legal protections. In assessing the relationship between academic sources of this \"best available science\" and ESA implementation, we looked at the 13,292 sources (e.g., academic journals, books, reports, regulations, personal communications, etc.) cited by the second Obama administration (2012-2016) across all ESA listings. We compared the IFs of all 4836 journals that published peer-reviewed papers cited in these listings against their citation frequency in ESA listings to determine whether a journal's IF varied in proportion with its contribution to federal conservation. Most of the peer-reviewed academic articles referenced in ESA listings came from low-IF or no-IF journals that tended to focus on specific taxa or regions. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
学术评审、晋升和终身教职程序都非常重视经常在高影响因子(IF)期刊上发表论文。然而,物种保护通常依赖于特定物种的信息,这些信息不太可能具有高影响因子期刊所需的广泛吸引力。相反,这些信息通常会发表在低影响因子、针对特定分类群和地区的期刊上。这表明对学术研究人员的激励与实施保护的科学需求之间可能存在不匹配。为了探讨这种不匹配,我们研究了美国《濒危物种法》(ESA)的联邦实施情况,该法要求使用 "现有最佳科学 "将物种列为濒危或受威胁物种,从而获得强有力的法律保护。在评估这种 "现有最佳科学 "的学术来源与 ESA 实施之间的关系时,我们研究了奥巴马第二届政府(2012-2016 年)在所有 ESA 列表中引用的 13292 个来源(如学术期刊、书籍、报告、法规、个人通信等)。我们比较了发表同行评审论文的所有 4836 种期刊在这些列表中被引用的 IF 与它们在 ESA 列表中被引用的频率,以确定期刊的 IF 是否与其对联邦保护的贡献成正比。ESA 列表中引用的大多数同行评审学术论文来自低 IF 或无 IF 期刊,这些期刊往往侧重于特定的类群或区域。尽管我们支持继续关注前沿的多学科科学,因为它能够开辟新的途径和范例,但我们的研究结果也强调了重视和资助特定类群和地区科学的必要性,因为这些科学是可操作的保护法律的基础。
Role of low-impact-factor journals in conservation implementation.
Academic review, promotion, and tenure processes place a premium on frequent publication in high-impact factor (IF) journals. However, conservation often relies on species-specific information that is unlikely to have the broad appeal needed for high-IF journals. Instead, this information is often distributed in low-IF, taxa- and region-specific journals. This suggests a potential mismatch between the incentives for academic researchers and the scientific needs of conservation implementation. To explore this mismatch, we looked at federal implementation of the United States Endangered Species Act (ESA), which requires the use of the "best available science" to list a species as endangered or threatened and thus receive powerful legal protections. In assessing the relationship between academic sources of this "best available science" and ESA implementation, we looked at the 13,292 sources (e.g., academic journals, books, reports, regulations, personal communications, etc.) cited by the second Obama administration (2012-2016) across all ESA listings. We compared the IFs of all 4836 journals that published peer-reviewed papers cited in these listings against their citation frequency in ESA listings to determine whether a journal's IF varied in proportion with its contribution to federal conservation. Most of the peer-reviewed academic articles referenced in ESA listings came from low-IF or no-IF journals that tended to focus on specific taxa or regions. Although we support continued attention to cutting-edge, multidisciplinary science for its ability to chart new pathways and paradigms, our findings stress the need to value and fund the taxa- and region-specific science that underpins actionable conservation laws.
期刊介绍:
Conservation Biology welcomes submissions that address the science and practice of conserving Earth's biological diversity. We encourage submissions that emphasize issues germane to any of Earth''s ecosystems or geographic regions and that apply diverse approaches to analyses and problem solving. Nevertheless, manuscripts with relevance to conservation that transcend the particular ecosystem, species, or situation described will be prioritized for publication.