The role of replication studies in ecology

Abstract Recent large‐scale projects in other disciplines have shown that results often fail to replicate when studies are repeated. The conditions contributing to this problem are also present in ecology, but there have not been any equivalent replication projects. Here, we survey ecologists'...

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Main Authors: Hannah Fraser, Ashley Barnett, Timothy H. Parker, Fiona Fidler
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-06-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6330
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spelling doaj-57ca19e442ea4218ad7e2a82eb1d8c6f2021-04-02T09:30:09ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582020-06-0110125197520710.1002/ece3.6330The role of replication studies in ecologyHannah Fraser0Ashley Barnett1Timothy H. Parker2Fiona Fidler3School of BioSciences University of Melbourne Parkville VIC AustraliaSchool of BioSciences University of Melbourne Parkville VIC AustraliaBiology Department Whitman College Walla Walla WA USASchool of BioSciences School of Historical and Philosophical Studies University of Melbourne Parkville VIC AustraliaAbstract Recent large‐scale projects in other disciplines have shown that results often fail to replicate when studies are repeated. The conditions contributing to this problem are also present in ecology, but there have not been any equivalent replication projects. Here, we survey ecologists' understanding of and opinions about replication studies. The majority of ecologists in our sample considered replication studies to be important (97%), not prevalent enough (91%), worth funding even given limited resources (61%), and suitable for publication in all journals (62%). However, there is a disconnect between this enthusiasm and the prevalence of direct replication studies in the literature which is much lower (0.023%: Kelly 2019) than our participants' median estimate of 10%. This may be explained by the obstacles our participants identified including the difficulty of conducting replication studies and of funding and publishing them. We conclude by offering suggestions for how replications could be better integrated into ecological research.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6330conceptual replicationdirect replicationgeneralizabilityopen sciencerepeatabilityreplicability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hannah Fraser
Ashley Barnett
Timothy H. Parker
Fiona Fidler
spellingShingle Hannah Fraser
Ashley Barnett
Timothy H. Parker
Fiona Fidler
The role of replication studies in ecology
Ecology and Evolution
conceptual replication
direct replication
generalizability
open science
repeatability
replicability
author_facet Hannah Fraser
Ashley Barnett
Timothy H. Parker
Fiona Fidler
author_sort Hannah Fraser
title The role of replication studies in ecology
title_short The role of replication studies in ecology
title_full The role of replication studies in ecology
title_fullStr The role of replication studies in ecology
title_full_unstemmed The role of replication studies in ecology
title_sort role of replication studies in ecology
publisher Wiley
series Ecology and Evolution
issn 2045-7758
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Abstract Recent large‐scale projects in other disciplines have shown that results often fail to replicate when studies are repeated. The conditions contributing to this problem are also present in ecology, but there have not been any equivalent replication projects. Here, we survey ecologists' understanding of and opinions about replication studies. The majority of ecologists in our sample considered replication studies to be important (97%), not prevalent enough (91%), worth funding even given limited resources (61%), and suitable for publication in all journals (62%). However, there is a disconnect between this enthusiasm and the prevalence of direct replication studies in the literature which is much lower (0.023%: Kelly 2019) than our participants' median estimate of 10%. This may be explained by the obstacles our participants identified including the difficulty of conducting replication studies and of funding and publishing them. We conclude by offering suggestions for how replications could be better integrated into ecological research.
topic conceptual replication
direct replication
generalizability
open science
repeatability
replicability
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6330
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