Our use, misuse, and abandonment of a concept: Whither habitat?

Summary The foundational concept of habitat lies at the very root of the entire science of ecology, but inaccurate use of the term compromises scientific rigor and communication among scientists and nonscientists. In 1997, Hall, Krausman & Morrison showed that ‘habitat’ was used correctly in onl...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ecology and evolution 2018-04, Vol.8 (8), p.4197-4208
Hauptverfasser: Kirk, David Anthony, Park, Allysia C., Smith, Adam C., Howes, Briar J., Prouse, Brigid K., Kyssa, Naschelly G., Fairhurst, Elizabeth N., Prior, Kent A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Summary The foundational concept of habitat lies at the very root of the entire science of ecology, but inaccurate use of the term compromises scientific rigor and communication among scientists and nonscientists. In 1997, Hall, Krausman & Morrison showed that ‘habitat’ was used correctly in only 55% of articles. We ask whether use of the term has been more accurate since their plea for standardization and whether use varies across the broader range of journals and taxa in the contemporary literature (1998–2012). We searched contemporary literature for ‘habitat’ and habitat‐related terms, ranking usage as either correct or incorrect, following a simplified version of Hall et al.'s definitions. We used generalized linear models to compare use of the term in contemporary literature with the papers reviewed by Hall et al. and to test the effects of taxa, journal impact in the contemporary articles and effects due to authors that cited Hall et al. Use of the term ‘habitat’ has not improved; it was still only used correctly about 55% of the time in the contemporary data. Proportionately more correct uses occurred in articles that focused on animals compared to ones that included plants, and papers that cited Hall et al. did use the term correctly more often. However, journal impact had no effect. Some habitat terms are more likely to be misused than others, notably ‘habitat type’, usually used to refer to vegetation type, and ‘suitable habitat’ or ‘unsuitable habitat’, which are either redundant or nonsensical by definition. Inaccurate and inconsistent use of the term can lead to (1) misinterpretation of scientific findings; (2) inefficient use of conservation resources; (3) ineffective identification and prioritization of protected areas; (4) limited comparability among studies; and (5) miscommunication of science‐based findings. Correct usage would improve communication with scientists and nonscientists, thereby benefiting conservation efforts, and ecology as a science. The clarity with which ecologists use the term ‘habitat’ has important ramifications for the conservation and management of species as well as the communication of ecology to the public and decision‐makers. We investigated the use of the term “habitat” in the conservation and ecology literature to see whether usage was any more accurate since the publication by Hall, Krausman, and Morrison (). Our results showed that usage has not improved, and we indicate why this could have important ramific
ISSN:2045-7758
2045-7758
DOI:10.1002/ece3.3812