4.6 Editorial Material

Four key challenges in the open-data revolution

Journal

JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY
Volume 90, Issue 9, Pages 2000-2004

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2656.13567

Keywords

big data; demography; FAIR; individual-level data; interoperability; open access; ornithology; reproducible research

Funding

  1. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/M018458/1]
  2. NERC [NE/M018458/1, NE/M018458/2] Funding Source: UKRI

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The study introduces an online repository aimed at connecting long-term ecological research data, identifies challenges in ecology, and proposes solutions. The open-data revolution will reshape our understanding of ecology, with a responsibility to ensure its ethical and effective implementation.
In Focus: Culina, A., Adriaensen, F., Bailey, L. D., et al. (2021) Connecting the data landscape of long-term ecological studies: The SPI-Birds data hub. Journal of Animal Ecology, . Long-term, individual-based datasets have been at the core of many key discoveries in ecology, and calls for the collection, curation and release of these kinds of ecological data are contributing to a flourishing open-data revolution in ecology. Birds, in particular, have been the focus of international research for decades, resulting in a number of uniquely long-term studies, but accessing these datasets has been historically challenging. Culina et al. (2021) introduce an online repository of individual-level, long-term bird records with ancillary data (e.g. genetics), which will enable key ecological questions to be answered on a global scale. As well as these opportunities, however, we argue that the ongoing open-data revolution comes with four key challenges relating to the (1) harmonisation of, (2) biases in, (3) expertise in and (4) communication of, open ecological data. Here, we discuss these challenges and how key efforts such as those by Culina et al. are using FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reproducible) principles to overcome them. The open-data revolution will undoubtedly reshape our understanding of ecology, but with it the ecological community has a responsibility to ensure this revolution is ethical and effective.

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