Abstract

As part of BioMed Central’s open science mission, we are pleased to announce that two of our journals have integrated with the open data repository Dryad. Authors submitting their research to either BMC Ecology or BMC Evolutionary Biology will now have the opportunity to deposit their data directly into the Dryad archive and will receive a permanent, citable link to their dataset. Although this does not affect any of our current data deposition policies at these journals, we hope to encourage a more widespread adoption of open data sharing in the fields of ecology and evolutionary biology by facilitating this process for our authors. We also take this opportunity to discuss some of the wider issues that may concern researchers when making their data openly available. Although we offer a number of positive examples from different fields of biology, we also recognise that reticence to data sharing still exists, and that change must be driven from within research communities in order to create future science that is fit for purpose in the digital age.This editorial was published jointly in both BMC Ecology and BMC Evolutionary Biology.

Highlights

  • This week we announce the integration of BMC Ecology and BMC Evolutionary Biology with the data repository Dryad

  • The Dryad repository hosts research data from across all fields of science and medicine, it has been among the ecological and evolutionary biology research communities that deposition has most frequently been taken up [1]. It is for this reason that we have targeted these journals with a view to extending integration to other fields in the future. What does this integration mean? If an author submits a paper to either of the aforementioned journals, they will receive an email with a one-time only link to Dryad with instructions on how to deposit their data, and how and where to cite the dataset in their paper using best practices from DataCite [2]

  • Like all journals published by BioMed Central, we strongly encourage all of our authors to archive, and make openly available, the data underlying their article

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Summary

Introduction

The Dryad repository hosts research data from across all fields of science and medicine, it has been among the ecological and evolutionary biology research communities that deposition has most frequently been taken up [1]. Like all journals published by BioMed Central, we strongly encourage all of our authors to archive, and make openly available, the data underlying their article.

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