Reciprocal knowledge exchange between climate-driven species redistribution and invasion ecology

Created 23/06/2025

Updated 23/06/2025

This record contains the R code and bibliographic data used in the publication 'Reciprocal knowledge exchange between climate-driven species redistribution and invasion ecology' (doi:10.21425/F5FBG60804). The aim of this study was to examine the current degree of cross-fertilisation between range shift ecology and invasion ecology, as a first step in determining the level of need for increasing connection between the two fields. To that end, here we examine (1) the structure and degree of similarity of themes explored within range shift and invasion ecology publications, (2) the extent that range shift and invasion publications draw on a common pool of research, and (3) the extent that range shift and invasion publications directly cite publications from the other field of study. This dataset includes: 1) R code used in the litsearchr package to generate a semi-automated search string, 2) publication data used for bibliographic analysis, and 3) R code used with the bibliometrix package for keyword co-occurrence analysis.

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Additional Info

Field Value
Title Reciprocal knowledge exchange between climate-driven species redistribution and invasion ecology
Language eng
Licence Not Specified
Landing Page https://data.gov.au/data/dataset/c80cf0c1-ee49-4000-bf8e-e9bc5a585790
Contact Point
Australian Ocean Data Network
brigette.wright@utas.edu.au
Reference Period 01/01/1996 - 31/12/2020
Geospatial Coverage Australia
Data Portal Australian Oceans Data Network

Data Source

This dataset was originally found on Australian Oceans Data Network "Reciprocal knowledge exchange between climate-driven species redistribution and invasion ecology". Please visit the source to access the original metadata of the dataset:
https://catalogue.aodn.org.au/geonetwork/srv/eng/csw/dataset/reciprocal-knowledge-exchange-between-climate-driven-species-redistribution-and-invasion-ecolog