The role of ethics in experimental marine biology and ecology

Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCU
Marsh, Helene;Kenchington, Richard
Abstract

Although most countries have ethical guidelines for research involving human subjects and other sentient animals, the ethical issues associated with field research have received little attention. Most experimental marine biologists and ecologists operate without ethical guidelines or scrutiny, despite intermittent community concern about their activities. We offer suggestions on how marine biologists and ecologists can protect the future of research involving the field collection and experimental manipulation of organisms by developing mechanisms to address community concerns that such research is ethically responsible. We urge experimental marine biologists and ecologists to take pre-emptive initiatives by encouraging: (1) institutional animal ethics committees to broaden their terms of reference to include environmental ethics; (2) scientific societies to develop codes of ethics to guide the environmental research conducted by their members; (3) editorial boards of journals to require the research they publish to conform to an appropriate code of ethics, and (4) management agencies that issue permits for field research to establish an ethics committee to advise them on the ethical issues raised by specific research proposals. We conclude that the resultant administrative burden on scientists would be low but that the penalties of operating without such protection can be high.

Journal

Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology

Publication Name

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Volume

300

ISBN/ISSN

0022-0981

Edition

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Issue

1-2

Pages Count

10

Location

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Publisher

Elsevier

Publisher Url

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Publisher Location

Leiden, Netherlands

Publish Date

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Url

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Date

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EISSN

N/A

DOI

10.1016/j.jembe.2003.11.024