abstract |
Research
in the last decade, especially in the last five
years during the Covid lock-down (2019–2021) and
the latest escalation of the Muscovite war against
Ukraine (2022–2023), has significantly changed the
scientific landscape and the relevance of certain
research areas. The specifics of research in the
context of the pandemic and war include the compression
of space for research, the reduction of field studies,
and the growing importance of collections and OSINT
analysis of the state of biota, including data on
war zones and occupation. Research priorities are
also changing, with an increased role and share
of applied tasks and attention to the impact of
the war on fauna. The lockdown period creates opportunities
to prepare various types of generalisa-tions and
increase attention to changes in both the biota
and the environment. |
references |
Afanasyev, S. O. 2023. Impact of war on hydroecosystems of Ukraine: conclusion of the first year of the full-scale invasion of Russia (a review). Hydrobiological Journal, 59 (4): 3–16. http://doi.org/10.1615/HydrobJ.v59.i4.10
Grunden, W., Yu. Kawamura, E. Kolchinsky, H. Maier, M. Yamazaki. 2005. Laying the foundation for wartime research: a comparative overview of science mobilization in National Socialist Germany, Japan, and the Soviet Union. Osiris, 20: 79–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/649414
Korzun, O. V. 2019. Agricultural research in Ukraine during the Second World War (1939–1945). LLC ‘Works’, Vinnytsia, 1–440. [In Ukrainian] https://bit.ly/3h5xcU8
Kotov, M. I., P. F. Oksiuk. 1923. How the civil war affected the distribution of plants and animals in Ukraine and Russia. Znannya, No: 2: 24–26. [In Ukrainian]
Mosyakin, S. L., A. S. Mosyakin. 2021. Lockdown botany 2020: some noteworthy records of alien plants in Kyiv City and Kyiv Region. Ukrainian Botanical Journal, 78 (2): 96–111. https://doi.org/10.15407/ukrbotj78.02.096
Roll, Y. V. 2007 [1944]. Report of the Institute of Zoology of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR on the work in evacuation. In: Onyshchenko, O. S. (ed.). 2007. History of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine (1941–1945). Part 1: Documents and materials. National Library of Ukraine, Kyiv, 291–294. [In Ukrainian]
Zagorodniuk, I. 2021. Ground squirrels of the war: a history of zoological research and Spermophilus collections in the Reichskommissariat Ukraine. Proceedings of the State Natural History Museum (Lviv), 37: 17–38. [In Ukrainian] https://doi.org/10.36885/nzdpm.2021.37.17-38
Zagorodniuk, I., D. Vyshnevsky. 2022. Biodiversity losses and changes in the zones of prolonged hostilities in Ukraine: theriological component (2014–2022). Visnyk Nac. Acad. Nauk Ukr., No. 11: 60–78. https://doi.org/10.15407/visn2022.11.060
Zagorodniuk, I. V. 2023. Priorities in nature conservation in times of war: the situation with the Great Meadow and the Great Steppe. Visnyk NAS of Ukraine, No. 9: 12–23. [In Ukrainian] https://doi.org/10.15407/visn2023.09.012
Zavyalova, L. V., V. V. Protopopova, S. M. Panchenko, [et al.] 2022. Synanthropisation of the vegetation cover of Ukraine as a result of military actions. In: Overcoming environmental risks and threats to the environment in emergency situations. Poltava, Lviv, 31–52. [In Ukrainian]
Lay, D. M. 1967. A Study of the Mammals of Iran: Resulting from the Street Expedition of 1962–63. Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, 1–282. (Series: Fieldiana, v. 54, 1031). https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.2961
Machlis, G. E., T. Hanson, Z. Špirić, J. E. McKendry. (eds). 2011. Warfare Ecology. A New Synthesis for Peace and Security. Springer, Dordrecht, I–XIII, 1–200. (Series: NATO Science for Peace and Security C: Environmental Security) https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-1214-0
Salter, C., A. J. Nocella, J. K. C. Bentley. (eds). 2014. Animals and War: Confronting the Military-Animal Industrial Complex. Lexington Books, 1–182. ISBN 9780739186510
Street, W. S., J. K. Street, R. Sawyer. 1986. Iranian adventure: The First Street Expedition. Field Museum of Natural History, 1–305.
|