Species inequality in scientific study.

Conserv Biol

Conservation Ecology Research Unit, Department of Zoology and Entomology, University of Pretoria, Pretoria 0002, South Africa.

Published: June 2010

AI Article Synopsis

  • Some conservationists debate whether to prioritize critically endangered species or focus on broader conservation of common species over larger areas.
  • A study of 1909 species in southern Africa found that threatened large mammals and reptiles receive more scientific attention, while threatened small mammals and amphibians receive less.
  • Overall, there is a significant disparity in the scientific investment across species, suggesting that certain species dominate research efforts, leaving many others without adequate attention for conservation efforts.

Article Abstract

Some conservationists argue for a focused effort to protect the most critically endangered species, and others suggest a large-scale endeavor to safeguard common species across large areas. Similar arguments are applicable to the distribution of scientific effort among species. Should conservation scientists focus research efforts on threatened species, common species, or do all species deserve equal attention? We assessed the scientific equity among 1909 mammals, birds, reptiles, and amphibians of southern Africa by relating the number of papers written about each species to their status on the International Union for Conservation of Nature Red List. Threatened large mammals and reptiles had more papers written about them than their nonthreatened counterparts, whereas threatened small mammals and amphibians received less attention than nonthreatened species. Threatened birds received an intermediate amount of attention in the scientific literature. Thus, threat status appears to drive scientific effort among some animal groups, whereas other factors (e.g., pest management and commercial interest) appear to dictate scientific investment in particular species of other groups. Furthermore, the scientific investment per species differed greatly between groups-the mean number of papers per threatened large mammal eclipsed that of threatened reptiles, birds, small mammals, and amphibians by 2.6-, 15-, 216-, and more than 500-fold, respectively. Thus, in the eyes of science, all species are not created equal. A few species commanded a great proportion of scientific attention, whereas for many species information that might inform conservation is virtually nonexistent.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1523-1739.2010.01453.xDOI Listing

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