Historical bias in palaeontological collections: Stylophora (Echinodermata) as a case study

Abstract Scientific colonialism (sensu Galtung, 1967) has grown in interest for the last decades in all scientific disciplines, including Palaeontology. In particular, Raja et al. (2022) showed that the Paleobiology Database (PBDB) was mostly based on research investigations from and/or in higher-in...

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Main Authors: Pauline Guenser, Khadija El Hariri, Nour-Eddine Jalil, Bertrand Lefebvre
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2025-01-01
Series:Swiss Journal of Palaeontology
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13358-024-00345-2
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author Pauline Guenser
Khadija El Hariri
Nour-Eddine Jalil
Bertrand Lefebvre
author_facet Pauline Guenser
Khadija El Hariri
Nour-Eddine Jalil
Bertrand Lefebvre
author_sort Pauline Guenser
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Scientific colonialism (sensu Galtung, 1967) has grown in interest for the last decades in all scientific disciplines, including Palaeontology. In particular, Raja et al. (2022) showed that the Paleobiology Database (PBDB) was mostly based on research investigations from and/or in higher-income countries (i.e., the Global North). This scientific practice, better known as “parachute science”, often implies a transfer of material from their country of origin (in the Global South) to another country of collection (in the Global North). We show that this global pattern can also be observed at a lower taxonomic scale by focusing on Stylophora, an extinct class of echinoderms. Based on a database gathering the 129 stylophoran holotypes including information of their year of description, country of origin, country of collection and author affiliation, we show comparable results to those of Raja et al. (2022). Indeed, 85% of stylophoran species originated from the Global North. Transferred material represents 17% of the holotypes and none of the corresponding publications included local collaboration. We detail the most highlighting example of parachute science, the duo Morocco-France, to understand the consequences of the colonial history between these two countries in the scientific practice of French researchers in Morocco, as well as the solution brought by Moroccan researchers and government. These results, while not surprising, mean that scientific colonialism is indeed observed not only in global databases, but also in our daily work. Researchers from the Global North then can act to decolonize their problematic practice to rebalance knowledge producing to build a true Global Research Community.
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spelling doaj-art-d5555397d91f41c0b94cb4aac86737b32025-01-26T12:50:46ZengSpringerOpenSwiss Journal of Palaeontology1664-23761664-23842025-01-0114411810.1186/s13358-024-00345-2Historical bias in palaeontological collections: Stylophora (Echinodermata) as a case studyPauline Guenser0Khadija El Hariri1Nour-Eddine Jalil2Bertrand Lefebvre3Universite Claude Bernard Lyon 1, CNRS, ENS de Lyon, LGL-TPE UMR 5276Laboratoire de Géo-Ressources, Géoenvironnement Et Génie Civil, Faculté Des Sciences Et Techniques, Université Cadi AyyadCR2P Centre de Recherche en Paléontologie – Paris, CNRS / MNHN / SU, Muséum National d’Histoire NaturelleUniversite Claude Bernard Lyon 1, CNRS, ENS de Lyon, LGL-TPE UMR 5276Abstract Scientific colonialism (sensu Galtung, 1967) has grown in interest for the last decades in all scientific disciplines, including Palaeontology. In particular, Raja et al. (2022) showed that the Paleobiology Database (PBDB) was mostly based on research investigations from and/or in higher-income countries (i.e., the Global North). This scientific practice, better known as “parachute science”, often implies a transfer of material from their country of origin (in the Global South) to another country of collection (in the Global North). We show that this global pattern can also be observed at a lower taxonomic scale by focusing on Stylophora, an extinct class of echinoderms. Based on a database gathering the 129 stylophoran holotypes including information of their year of description, country of origin, country of collection and author affiliation, we show comparable results to those of Raja et al. (2022). Indeed, 85% of stylophoran species originated from the Global North. Transferred material represents 17% of the holotypes and none of the corresponding publications included local collaboration. We detail the most highlighting example of parachute science, the duo Morocco-France, to understand the consequences of the colonial history between these two countries in the scientific practice of French researchers in Morocco, as well as the solution brought by Moroccan researchers and government. These results, while not surprising, mean that scientific colonialism is indeed observed not only in global databases, but also in our daily work. Researchers from the Global North then can act to decolonize their problematic practice to rebalance knowledge producing to build a true Global Research Community.https://doi.org/10.1186/s13358-024-00345-2Scientific colonialismParachute scienceMoroccoEchinoderms
spellingShingle Pauline Guenser
Khadija El Hariri
Nour-Eddine Jalil
Bertrand Lefebvre
Historical bias in palaeontological collections: Stylophora (Echinodermata) as a case study
Swiss Journal of Palaeontology
Scientific colonialism
Parachute science
Morocco
Echinoderms
title Historical bias in palaeontological collections: Stylophora (Echinodermata) as a case study
title_full Historical bias in palaeontological collections: Stylophora (Echinodermata) as a case study
title_fullStr Historical bias in palaeontological collections: Stylophora (Echinodermata) as a case study
title_full_unstemmed Historical bias in palaeontological collections: Stylophora (Echinodermata) as a case study
title_short Historical bias in palaeontological collections: Stylophora (Echinodermata) as a case study
title_sort historical bias in palaeontological collections stylophora echinodermata as a case study
topic Scientific colonialism
Parachute science
Morocco
Echinoderms
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s13358-024-00345-2
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AT noureddinejalil historicalbiasinpalaeontologicalcollectionsstylophoraechinodermataasacasestudy
AT bertrandlefebvre historicalbiasinpalaeontologicalcollectionsstylophoraechinodermataasacasestudy