Fugly flowers frequently forgotten in research

Publicly released:
Australia; WA
CC:0
CC:0

Ugly plants deserve research too! At least that's what we think after international and Aussie researchers discovered that beautiful plants are more likely to be studied. The team rated 113 plant species from 280 peer-reviewed papers over the last 45 years and found that pretty features such as flowers and conspicuousness were likely to attract a researcher. Blue plants were the most studied, and white, red and pink flowers were more common among the literature than the bland greens and browns, they say. The team say that the uggos should be investigated just as much to avoid skewing conservation efforts.

Media release

From: Springer Nature

Research may be skewed towards more attractive plants

Plants that have aesthetic appeal are more likely to be studied by researchers regardless of their ecological importance, suggests a paper published in Nature Plants. These findings have implications for conservation biology and may inform better research practices.

Plants have played a significant role in the evolution of modern science, and their properties continue to be analysed. A researcher conducting a laboratory-based study might consider functional criteria, such as growth rate or genetics, to identify a plant species to examine, whereas field scientists might prioritize a particular species based on various non-ecological factors. Such scenarios might alter research outcomes and could impact future conservation efforts, but quantifying these biases has been difficult.

Martino Adamo and colleagues analysed 113 plant species—typical of the Southwestern Alps—mentioned in 280 peer-reviewed papers over the past 45 years. The authors found that morphological characteristics, such as accessible flowers and conspicuousness, were among the traits that attracted research attention. They also found that blue plants were the most studied, and that white, red and pink flowers were more common in the literature than the baseline of green and brown plants. Stem height, a plant’s ability to stand out among others, was also a contributing factor. The authors also determined that rarity was not a significant driver for research attention.

These morphological traits, which do not affect the ecological relevance and importance of the plants, constitute an ‘aesthetic bias’, argue the authors. This bias may have negative impacts in that it may skew conservation efforts in favour of plants that get more attention, regardless of other plants and the health of the overall ecosystem.

Attachments

Note: Not all attachments are visible to the general public. Research URLs will go live after the embargo ends.

Research Springer Nature, Web page The URL will go live after the embargo ends
Journal/
conference:
Nature Plants
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Curtin University
Funder: K.D. is funded under the Australian Government through the Australian Research Council Industrial Transformation Training Centre for Mine Site Restoration (project no. CI150100041). S.M. acknowledges support from the European Commission (program H2020-MSCA-IF-2019; grant no. 882221).
Media Contact/s
Contact details are only visible to registered journalists.