Primate field research during a pandemic: Lessons learned from the SARS-CoV-2 outbreak

IF 2 3区 生物学 Q1 ZOOLOGY
Katharine M. Jack, Nelle K. Kulick
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Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic abruptly halted most primate field research in early 2020. While international travel bans and regional travel restrictions made continuing primate field research impossible early on in the pandemic, ethical concerns of transmitting the virus from researchers to primates and surrounding human communities informed decisions regarding the timing of resuming research. Between June and September 2020, we surveyed field primatologists regarding the impacts of the pandemic on their research. We received 90 completed surveys from respondents residing in 21 countries, though most were from the United States and Canada. These data provide a valuable window into the perspectives and actions taken by researchers during the early stages of the pandemic as events were still unfolding. Only 2.4% of projects reported continuing research as usual, 33.7% continued with some decrease in productivity, 42.2% reported postponing research projects, and 21.7% reported canceling projects or postponing research indefinitely. Respondents most severely impacted by the pandemic were those establishing new field sites and graduate students whose projects were postponed or canceled due to pandemic-related shutdowns. Fears about increased poaching, the inability to pay local assistants, frozen research funds, declining habituation, disruptions to data collection, and delays in student projects were among the top concerns of respondents. Nearly all the projects able to continue research in any capacity during the early months of the pandemic were run by or employed primate habitat country primatologists. This finding is a major lesson learned from the pandemic; without habitat country scientists, primate research is not sustainable.

Abstract Image

流行病期间的灵长类动物实地研究:从严重急性呼吸系统综合征冠状病毒2型疫情中吸取的教训。
新冠肺炎大流行在2020年初突然停止了大多数灵长类动物的实地研究。尽管国际旅行禁令和地区旅行限制使灵长类动物在疫情早期无法继续进行实地研究,但对将病毒从研究人员传播给灵长类动物和周围人类社区的伦理担忧为恢复研究的时间做出了决定。2020年6月至9月,我们调查了野外灵长类动物学家,了解疫情对他们研究的影响。我们收到了居住在21个国家的受访者的90份完整调查,尽管大多数来自美国和加拿大。这些数据为了解研究人员在疫情早期所采取的观点和行动提供了一个宝贵的窗口,因为事件仍在发生。只有2.4%的项目报告照常进行研究,33.7%的项目继续进行,生产力有所下降,42.2%的项目报告推迟了研究项目,21.7%的项目报告取消了项目或无限期推迟了研究。受疫情影响最严重的受访者是那些建立新现场的人,以及那些因疫情相关停工而推迟或取消项目的研究生。受访者最担心的是偷猎行为的增加、无法支付当地助理的工资、研究资金的冻结、习惯化程度的下降、数据收集的中断以及学生项目的延误。在疫情最初的几个月里,几乎所有能够以任何身份继续研究的项目都由灵长类动物栖息地国家的灵长类动物学家负责或雇佣。这一发现是从新冠疫情中吸取的重要教训;没有栖息地国家的科学家,灵长类动物的研究是不可持续的。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
8.30%
发文量
103
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The objective of the American Journal of Primatology is to provide a forum for the exchange of ideas and findings among primatologists and to convey our increasing understanding of this order of animals to specialists and interested readers alike. Primatology is an unusual science in that its practitioners work in a wide variety of departments and institutions, live in countries throughout the world, and carry out a vast range of research procedures. Whether we are anthropologists, psychologists, biologists, or medical researchers, whether we live in Japan, Kenya, Brazil, or the United States, whether we conduct naturalistic observations in the field or experiments in the lab, we are united in our goal of better understanding primates. Our studies of nonhuman primates are of interest to scientists in many other disciplines ranging from entomology to sociology.
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