Authors
Elena Angulo, Christophe Diagne, Liliana Ballesteros-Mejia, Tasnime Adamjy, Danish A Ahmed, Evgeny Akulov, Achyut K Banerjee, César Capinha, Cheikh AKM Dia, Gauthier Dobigny, Virginia G Duboscq-Carra, Marina Golivets, Phillip J Haubrock, Gustavo Heringer, Natalia Kirichenko, Melina Kourantidou, Chunlong Liu, Martin A Nuñez, David Renault, David Roiz, Ahmed Taheri, Laura NH Verbrugge, Yuya Watari, Wen Xiong, Franck Courchamp
Publication date
2021/6/25
Journal
Science of the Total Environment
Volume
775
Pages
144441
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
We contend that the exclusive focus on the English language in scientific research might hinder effective communication between scientists and practitioners or policy makers whose mother tongue is non-English. This barrier in scientific knowledge and data transfer likely leads to significant knowledge gaps and may create biases when providing global patterns in many fields of science. To demonstrate this, we compiled data on the global economic costs of invasive alien species reported in 15 non-English languages. We compared it with equivalent data from English documents (i.e., the InvaCost database, the most up-to-date repository of invasion costs globally). The comparison of both databases (~7500 entries in total) revealed that non-English sources: (i) capture a greater amount of data than English sources alone (2500 vs. 2396 cost entries respectively); (ii) add 249 invasive species and 15 countries to …
Total citations
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