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Could a little tough love help corals adapt to climate change?
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Boston Children s Museum Surprising Discovery About Its Ball Python
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Coral Restoration Foundation Launches a Revolutionary New Tool for the Coral Restoration Community
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They found that institutions from several lower-middle- and upper-middle-income countries with abundant coral reefs produced less research than institutions based in high-income countries with fewer or in some cases no reefs. They also found that host-nation scientists (scientists from the nations where field research was conducted) were not included in authorship on studies almost twice as often when those studies were conducted in lower-income countries. Unfortunately, for decades, it was the norm for researchers from high-income nations and wealthy institutions to engage in parachute science practices and build successful academic careers because of that. It s only recently that people started discussing about unfair research practices in marine science, says first author Paris Stefanoudis, a postdoctoral researcher in zoology at Oxford University. There wasn t any quantifiable evidence for it before now.
By analyzing 50 years worth of coral reef biodiversity studies, researchers reporting in the journal
Current Biology on February 22 have quantified the practice of parachute science, which happens when international scientists, typically from higher-income countries, conduct field studies in another, typically lower-income country, without engaging with local researchers. They found that institutions from several lower-middle- and upper-middle-income countries with abundant coral reefs produced less research than institutions based in high-income countries with fewer or in some cases no reefs. They also found that host-nation scientists (scientists from the nations where field research was conducted) were not included in authorship on studies almost twice as often when those studies were conducted in lower-income countries.