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Growth of non-English-language literature on biodiversity conservation

Growth of non-English-language literature on biodiversity conservation
Growth of non-English-language literature on biodiversity conservation

English is widely recognized as the language of science, and English-language publications (ELPs) are rapidly increasing. It is often assumed that the number of non-ELPs is decreasing. This assumption contributes to the underuse of non-ELPs in conservation science, practice, and policy, especially at the international level. However, the number of conservation articles published in different languages is poorly documented. Using local and international search systems, we searched for scientific articles on biodiversity conservation published from 1980 to 2018 in English and 15 non-English languages. We compared the growth rate in publications across languages. In 12 of the 15 non-English languages, published conservation articles significantly increased every year over the past 39 years, at a rate similar to English-language articles. The other three languages showed contrasting results, depending on the search system. Since the 1990s, conservation science articles in most languages increased exponentially. The variation in the number of non-English-language articles identified among the search systems differed markedly (e.g., for simplified Chinese, 11,148 articles returned with local search system and 803 with Scopus). Google Scholar and local literature search systems returned the most articles for 11 and 4 non-English languages, respectively. However, the proportion of peer-reviewed conservation articles published in non-English languages was highest in Scopus, followed by Web of Science and local search systems, and lowest in Google Scholar. About 20% of the sampled non-English-language articles provided no title or abstract in English; thus, in theory, they were undiscoverable with English keywords. Possible reasons for this include language barriers and the need to disseminate research in countries where English is not widely spoken. Given the known biases in statistical methods and study characteristics between English- and non-English-language studies, non-English-language articles will continue to play an important role in improving the understanding of biodiversity and its conservation.

barrera del lenguaje, bases de datos de la biodiversidad mundial, biodiversity information, evidence synthesis, global biodiversity databases, idiomas, información sobre la biodiversidad, language barrier, languages, publication bias, sesgo de publicación, síntesis de evidencias, 生物多样性信息;证据综合;全球生物多样性数据库;语言;语言障碍;出版偏向
0888-8892
Chowdhury, Shawan
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Gonzalez, Kristofer
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Aytekin, M. Çisel Kemahlı
c3045cb1-876c-4125-b573-6c1920bb7744
Baek, Seung Yun
8844ff0f-3950-4eb5-b8b1-10f5de8dfc09
Bełcik, Michał
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Bertolino, Sandro
deb8e93e-fa4f-40ae-a813-86942edb018c
Duijns, Sjoerd
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Han, Yuqing
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Jantke, Kerstin
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Katayose, Ryosuke
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Lin, Mu Ming
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Nourani, Elham
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Ramos, Danielle Leal
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Rouyer, Marie Morgane
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Sidemo-Holm, William
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Vozykova, Svetlana
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Zamora-Gutierrez, Veronica
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Amano, Tatsuya
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Chowdhury, Shawan
3ddcd999-1857-4c61-9260-75d3f0fe96ef
Gonzalez, Kristofer
bf7a797a-1284-4397-b867-e861d74bd5dc
Aytekin, M. Çisel Kemahlı
c3045cb1-876c-4125-b573-6c1920bb7744
Baek, Seung Yun
8844ff0f-3950-4eb5-b8b1-10f5de8dfc09
Bełcik, Michał
6c6f416d-e08d-4ba0-b120-36e8f08688f6
Bertolino, Sandro
deb8e93e-fa4f-40ae-a813-86942edb018c
Duijns, Sjoerd
96c044c6-514d-4a37-8343-6274e88857e1
Han, Yuqing
7a5d7e6f-2aee-47e0-aa1f-ce05527d0691
Jantke, Kerstin
f5aebe85-7e73-4ca1-9e30-6cb0be0f4db4
Katayose, Ryosuke
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Lin, Mu Ming
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Nourani, Elham
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Ramos, Danielle Leal
f683ad0b-90de-4398-b820-9cf8eb1ca865
Rouyer, Marie Morgane
139b5be2-e645-4afd-a108-551d39a4dcc8
Sidemo-Holm, William
67d65345-a074-46c5-8f0e-528c82387d21
Vozykova, Svetlana
e03a3207-372d-4dd8-a14a-922b5ab6e305
Zamora-Gutierrez, Veronica
17a6b9d9-3346-4df6-9438-026b7342e28a
Amano, Tatsuya
e7c187c3-c64d-4798-886e-14527301e162

Chowdhury, Shawan, Gonzalez, Kristofer, Aytekin, M. Çisel Kemahlı, Baek, Seung Yun, Bełcik, Michał, Bertolino, Sandro, Duijns, Sjoerd, Han, Yuqing, Jantke, Kerstin, Katayose, Ryosuke, Lin, Mu Ming, Nourani, Elham, Ramos, Danielle Leal, Rouyer, Marie Morgane, Sidemo-Holm, William, Vozykova, Svetlana, Zamora-Gutierrez, Veronica and Amano, Tatsuya (2022) Growth of non-English-language literature on biodiversity conservation. Conservation Biology, 36 (4), [e13883]. (doi:10.1111/cobi.13883).

Record type: Article

Abstract

English is widely recognized as the language of science, and English-language publications (ELPs) are rapidly increasing. It is often assumed that the number of non-ELPs is decreasing. This assumption contributes to the underuse of non-ELPs in conservation science, practice, and policy, especially at the international level. However, the number of conservation articles published in different languages is poorly documented. Using local and international search systems, we searched for scientific articles on biodiversity conservation published from 1980 to 2018 in English and 15 non-English languages. We compared the growth rate in publications across languages. In 12 of the 15 non-English languages, published conservation articles significantly increased every year over the past 39 years, at a rate similar to English-language articles. The other three languages showed contrasting results, depending on the search system. Since the 1990s, conservation science articles in most languages increased exponentially. The variation in the number of non-English-language articles identified among the search systems differed markedly (e.g., for simplified Chinese, 11,148 articles returned with local search system and 803 with Scopus). Google Scholar and local literature search systems returned the most articles for 11 and 4 non-English languages, respectively. However, the proportion of peer-reviewed conservation articles published in non-English languages was highest in Scopus, followed by Web of Science and local search systems, and lowest in Google Scholar. About 20% of the sampled non-English-language articles provided no title or abstract in English; thus, in theory, they were undiscoverable with English keywords. Possible reasons for this include language barriers and the need to disseminate research in countries where English is not widely spoken. Given the known biases in statistical methods and study characteristics between English- and non-English-language studies, non-English-language articles will continue to play an important role in improving the understanding of biodiversity and its conservation.

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Published date: 3 January 2022
Additional Information: Funding Information: S.C. is funded by the Australian Government, the University of Queensland, and the Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation Science. K.J. is funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) under Germany's Excellence Strategy—EXC 2037 ‘CLICCS—Climate, Climatic Change, and Society’(project 390683824), contribution to the Center for Earth System Research and Sustainability (CEN) of Universität Hamburg. M.-M.R. has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement 766417. T.A. is funded by the Australian Research Council Future Fellowship (FT180100354) and the University of Queensland strategic funding. We thank Editage (www.editage.com) for English language editing. Funding Information: S.C. is funded by the Australian Government, the University of Queensland, and the Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation Science. K.J. is funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) under Germany's Excellence Strategy—EXC 2037 ‘CLICCS—Climate, Climatic Change, and Society’(project 390683824), contribution to the Center for Earth System Research and Sustainability (CEN) of Universität Hamburg. M.‐M.R. has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under the Marie Skłodowska‐Curie grant agreement 766417. T.A. is funded by the Australian Research Council Future Fellowship (FT180100354) and the University of Queensland strategic funding. We thank Editage ( www.editage.com ) for English language editing. Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Authors. Conservation Biology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Society for Conservation Biology.
Keywords: barrera del lenguaje, bases de datos de la biodiversidad mundial, biodiversity information, evidence synthesis, global biodiversity databases, idiomas, información sobre la biodiversidad, language barrier, languages, publication bias, sesgo de publicación, síntesis de evidencias, 生物多样性信息;证据综合;全球生物多样性数据库;语言;语言障碍;出版偏向

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 486686
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/486686
ISSN: 0888-8892
PURE UUID: 0383d86d-90b9-4fe9-b1a6-a58c4aa69ce3
ORCID for Veronica Zamora-Gutierrez: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0661-5180

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Date deposited: 01 Feb 2024 17:45
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:18

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Contributors

Author: Shawan Chowdhury
Author: Kristofer Gonzalez
Author: M. Çisel Kemahlı Aytekin
Author: Seung Yun Baek
Author: Michał Bełcik
Author: Sandro Bertolino
Author: Sjoerd Duijns
Author: Yuqing Han
Author: Kerstin Jantke
Author: Ryosuke Katayose
Author: Mu Ming Lin
Author: Elham Nourani
Author: Danielle Leal Ramos
Author: Marie Morgane Rouyer
Author: William Sidemo-Holm
Author: Svetlana Vozykova
Author: Veronica Zamora-Gutierrez ORCID iD
Author: Tatsuya Amano

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