Communicating useful results from restoration ecology research

Authors:
Zedler, J.

Publication Date:
2018

Abstract/Summary:
Interactions between restoration ecologists and stakeholders (policy makers and decision makers, volunteers, public supporters) benefit from clear communication of research findings. Given that adaptive management (e.g. learning while restoring) already stresses frequent and effective discourse among researchers and stakeholders, it seems that a new specialty under a new term, “translational ecology,” adds more confusion than clarity. Communicating technical information to nontechnical audiences benefits from simple rules—be clear and concise, retain familiar terms that serve well, and use fewer words.

Resource Type:
Peer-reviewed Article

Source:
Restoration Ecology

Link:
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/rec.12689