“…It is not odd that they receive few citations, and none in Thomson Reuters-monitored journals; it would be odd if they were heavily cited and/or cited in such journals. The only report of this type that has received great attention in recent years is the rediscovery of the ivory-billed woodpecker published in Science (Fitzpatrick et al, 2005), and the only reason it was published there is because the ivory-billed woodpecker is "the Holy Grail of birdersthe one sighting every birder fantasizes about" (Jackson, 2004, p. 1). If the rediscovery had been of Agalinis caddoensis (Caddo purple false-foxglove), a plant discovered and collected in 1913 in Caddo Parish, Louisiana, by Francis Whittier Pennell, Curator of Botany, Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia, and never found again, it would never have found its way into Science or any other "top" journal (D.T.…”