The Lotic Intersite Nitrogen Experiments: an example of successful ecological research collaboration

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Issue Date
2016-05-06Author
Jarecke
Dodds, Walter K.
Webster, Jackson R.
Crenshaw, C. L.
Helton, A. M.
O'Brien, Jonathan M.
Martí, E.
Tank, Jennifer L.
Burgin, Amy J.
Publisher
University of Chicago Press
Type
Article
Article Version
Scholarly/refereed, publisher version
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Show full item recordAbstract
Collaboration is an essential skill for modern ecologists because it brings together diverse expertise, viewpoints, and study systems. The Lotic Intersite Nitrogen eXperiments (LINX I and II), a 17-y research endeavor involving scores of early- to late-career stream ecologists, is an example of the benefits, challenges, and approaches of successful collaborative research in ecology. The scientific success of LINX reflected tangible attributes including clear scientific goals (hypothesis-driven research), coordinated research methods, a team of cooperative scientists, excellent leadership, extensive communication, and a philosophy of respect for input from all collaborators. Intangible aspects of the collaboration included camaraderie and strong team chemistry. LINX further benefited from being part of a discipline in which collaboration is a tradition, clear data-sharing and authorship guidelines, an approach that melded field experiments and modeling, and a shared collaborative goal in the form of a universal commitment to see the project and resulting data products through to completion.
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Citation
Dodds, W.K. "The Lotic Intersite Nitrogen Experiments: An Example of Successful Ecological Research Collaboration." University of Chicago Press, 06 May 2014
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