70 years of herpetology in India: insights into shifts in focal research areas and gender ratios among authors

Author:

Cyriac Vivek Philip12ORCID,Dharwadkar Sneha3ORCID,Mital Anuja3ORCID,Mohan Ashwini Venkatanarayana4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Ecological Sciences, Indian Institute of Science, CV Raman Rd, Bengaluru, Karnataka, 560012, India

2. The Liana Trust, Sy. No. 1418/1419, Rathnapuri, Hunsur, Karnataka, 1571189, India

3. Freshwater Turtles and Tortoises Foundation, Thane, 400610, Maharashtra, India

4. Department of Evolutionary Biology, Zoological Institute, Braunschweig University of Technology, 38106 Braunschweig, Germany

Abstract

Abstract Herpetology in India took off during the British colonial rule with the documentation of herpetofauna. Several studies have outlined the early history of Indian herpetology; however, few have traced the growth of this field since India’s independence. We analyse trends in Indian herpetology focusing on taxa, subfields, and authorship over the last 70 years. Of the 1177 published articles we analysed, 64.9% studied reptiles, 26.5% studied amphibians and 8.6% were general herpetofaunal studies. Frogs, lizards, and snakes being the most diverse herpetofauna groups, each accounted for 20-21% of the published articles and significantly outnumber publications on caecilians (2.3%), salamanders (0.4%), chelonians (12.6%), and crocodiles (4.4%). We found a significantly greater number of publications on Diversity & Distribution (34.2%), Taxonomy & Systematics (21.6%) and Ecology (19.4%) compared to other subfields, and detected a decline in Development, Physiology & Cytology and Evolutionary biology studies over the last four decades (1980-2019). The gender ratio among co-authors was dominated by men with only 29.7% of publications containing women authors. The overall proportion of women authors has not changed significantly over decades, but our analyses detected a significant decrease in women first authors and the proportion of women authors when the corresponding authors were men. Women authors were substantially lower in the subfield of Taxonomy & Systematics, and women published significantly more on amphibians compared to reptiles. Overall, we highlight the growth of herpetology in India from two key viewpoints, scientific pursuits, and gender parity among herpetologists.

Publisher

Brill

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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