Best practices for moving from correlation to causation in ecological research

causal inference
Authors

Hannah E. Correia

Laura E. Dee

Jarrett E. K. Byrnes

John Fieberg

Marie-Josee Fortin

Clark Glymour

Jakob Runge

Bill Shipley

Ilya Shpitser

Katherine Johannet Siegel

George Sugihara

Betsy von Holle

Paul J. Ferraro

Published

December 31, 2024

Doi

67

Abstract
In ecology, causal questions are ubiquitous, yet the literature describing systematic approaches to answering these questions is vast and fragmented across different traditions (e.g., randomization, structural equation modeling, convergent cross mapping). In our Perspective, we connect the causal assumptions, tasks, frameworks, and methods across these traditions, thereby providing a synthesis of the concepts and methodological advances for detecting and quantifying causal relationships in ecological systems. Through a newly developed workflow, we emphasize how ecologists’ choices among empirical approaches are guided by the pre-existing knowledge that ecologists have and the causal assumptions that ecologists are willing to make.
Keywords

NA