2018
DOI: 10.3389/fevo.2017.00175
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Our House Is Burning: Discrepancy in Climate Change vs. Biodiversity Coverage in the Media as Compared to Scientific Literature

Abstract: Scientists, policy makers, and journalists are three key, interconnected players involved in prioritizing and implementing solutions to mitigate the consequences of anthropogenic pressures on the environment. The way in which information is framed and expertise is communicated by the media is crucial for political decisions and for the integrated management of environmental issues. Here we present a comparative study of scientific literature and press articles addressing climate change and biodiversity. We ext… Show more

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Cited by 121 publications
(91 citation statements)
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“…We believe that conservation scientists can and should be more aggressive and strategic about communicating their results (Legagneux et al . ). For instance, by using Google Trends and other culturomics tools for tracking trends on social media platforms (Ladle et al .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…We believe that conservation scientists can and should be more aggressive and strategic about communicating their results (Legagneux et al . ). For instance, by using Google Trends and other culturomics tools for tracking trends on social media platforms (Ladle et al .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Moreover, some conservationists also believe that what limited "bandwidth" the public dedicates to environmental causes has become swamped by global warming and climate change, which could lead to an artificial decoupling of these topics from other environmental issues, many of which are tightly linked to climate change (Novacek 2008;Veríssimo et al 2014;Legagneux et al 2018). The fear that public interest in conser-vation is being overwhelmed by climate change (Curry et al 2007;Novacek 2008) could be justified, or it may be an artifact of the way many polling datasets are collected, in that the commonly used "most important problem" (MIP) technique restricts the number of issues that an individual respondent can raise as MIP; if there is an increase in one issue being raised as MIP, it unavoidably leads to decreases in other issues.…”
Section: Front Ecol Environmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…A recent review of scientific literature and press articles identified a deficit in biodiversity communication, reporting that media coverage of biodiversity loss was, on average, less than one third that of climate change (Legagneux et al, ). While the authors posit various reasons for these findings, they do not mention what we perceive to be one of the most salient: the public is not concerned about biodiversity loss because they do not notice the presence of biodiversity in the first place.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%