Measuring Engagement with Shark Research in Science, News and Social media, and Policy: A Bibliometric Analysis

(Article)

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Science-Policy Interface
Oceans
Authors
Affiliation

Rémi Toupin

Dalhousie University

Kory Melnick

Dalhousie University

Tamanna Moharana

Dalhousie University

Blake Curry

Dalhousie University

Catherine Gracey

Dalhousie University

Naomi Richards

Dalhousie University

Bertrum H. MacDonald

Dalhousie University

Philippe Mongeon

Dalhousie University

Published

September 2023

Doi

Citation

Toupin, R., Melnick, K., Moharana, T., Curry, B., Gracey, C., Richards, N., MacDonald, B. H., & Mongeon, P. (2023). Measuring engagement with shark research in science, news and social media, and policy : A bibliometric analysis. Marine Policy, 157, 105829. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpol.2023.105829

Abstract

Shark conservation is an urgent and complex biodiversity matter. While research on sharks is an important output of the knowledge production processes that could inform conservation policy and management decisions, whether all relevant knowledge is reaching the public and policy-makers has been questioned. Concerns have been expressed that attention given to research is skewed towards specific and often more sensationalist topics that do not provide an accurate picture of the shark-related issues and of possible solutions to decision-makers and the general public. This study thus analysed Web of Science publications related to sharks to determine the degree of attention different areas of shark-related research received in science, social media, news media, and policy documents. Highly concentrated distributions of citations, and mentions in social media, news media, or policy documents were found, but little relationship exists between the attention that individual publications or research areas receive in the different spheres. These findings show the diversity of shark-related research and its audiences and suggest a need for research evaluation to acknowledge that research impact can take many forms. In addition, developing outreach strategies is needed to ensure that relevant research is adequately disseminated to the public and policy-makers. This study can help researchers, resource managers, and other stakeholders better understand the diverse body of scientific evidence that could be mobilized into policies and practices for shark conservation.

Key figures

Scientific and media attention to shark research assessed through z-scores of citations, tweets, news, and policy mentions