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understanding’, and this was only marginally non-significant (fig. 15). Again, the importance
of each depends upon how much is already known about the species
and the urgency of the
situation. Assessments of HCPs in the US have identified a lack of knowledge of the basic
biology of many species (Harding et al, 2001), and species distributions (Tear et al, 1995) and
it is argued by some that no action should be launched without
a basic knowledge and
thorough assessment (Caughley & Gunn, 1996). However, the question as to ‘how much is
enough?’ (Tear et al, 2005) is unanswerable.
It is perhaps more prevalent in a discussion of the utility of
conservation science research,
however, to think in terms of the concept defined by Linklater (2003) as ‘targeted’ research.
This is similar to that referred to by one practitioner as ‘applied science’, and it was the
consensus amongst the interviewees (section 5.1.1) that this
middle ground is missing in
conservation biology; encompassing studies incorporating any type of research with a sound
scientific basis, but tailored towards an issue of direct conservation relevance.
This was addressed in the survey by the question of the motivation behind the research project.
Research focused on management issues has historically been more difficult to publish in peer
reviewed journals than general ecological research (Fleishman et al, 1999). However, there
was a higher proportion of implementation amongst respondents
who had either addressed
conservation management issues or had the aim of informing decision making, and indeed this
was one of the main explanatory variables (table 6). Academics are often incentivised to
conduct research that has relevance on a wider scale (Fazey et al, 2004), but the results from
the practitioner interviews, and the inclusion of species level research as a main determinant of
uptake of findings, provides empirical support to suggestions that targeted and ‘lower impact’
research has more practical relevance and should be given more
importance in peer-review
science (Aplet et al, 1992; Sheil, 2001; Prendergast et al, 1999).
This issue is particularly
important in relation to the fact that conservation has limited funding (Ferraro & Pattanayak,
2006), which perhaps should be directed towards the research with practical application (Sheil,
2001).
The fact that the majority of studies addressed ‘targeted’ science suggests that this is
necessarily
gaining importance, but again this could be a function of a biased sample rather
than the general state of scientific publication; made more likely by the fact that species based
76
studies will be by definition more targeted than the biodiversity and ecosystem based studies
not controlled for in this analysis. However, if there was a bias
in the sample towards those
whose findings have been implemented, this would only serve to emphasise the importance of
targeted research.
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