Developing an ocean best practice: a case study of marine sampling practices from Australia.
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Date
2023Author
Przeslawski, Rachel
Barrett, Neville
Carroll, Andrew
Foster, Scott
Gibbons, Brooke
Jordan, Alan
Monk, Jacquomo
Langlois, Tim
Lara-Lopez, Ana
Pearlman, Jay
Picard, Kim
Pini-Fitzsimmons, Joni
van Ruth, Paul
Williams, Joel
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Since 2012, there has been a surge in the numbers of marine science publications that use the term ‘best practice’, yet the term is not often defined, nor is the process behind the best practice development described. Importantly a ‘best practice’ is more than a documented practice that an individual or institution uses and considers good. This article describes a rigorous process to develop an ocean best practice using examples from a case study from Australia in which a suite of nine standard operating procedures were released in 2018 and have since become national best practices. The process to develop a best practice includes three phases 1) scope and recruit, 2) develop and release, 3) revise and ratify. Each phase includes 2-3 steps and associated actions that are supported by the Ocean Best Practices System (www.oceanbestpractices.org). The Australian case study differs from many other practices, which only use the second phase (develop and release). In this article, we emphasiz.....
Journal
Frontiers in Marine ScienceVolume
10Issue
Article 1173075.Page Range
6pp.Document Language
enSustainable Development Goals (SDG)
14.aMaturity Level
MatureDOI Original
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2023.1173075Citation
Przeslawski, R., Barrett, N., Carroll, A., Foster, S,. Gibbons, B., Jordan, A., Monk, J., Langlois,T,. Lara-Lopez, A,. Pearlman, J,. Picard, K., Pini-Fitzsimmons, J., van Ruth, P. and Williams, J. (2023) Developing an ocean best practice: a case study of marine sampling practices from Australia. Frontiers in Marine Science, 10:1173075., 6pp. DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2023.1173075Collections