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Key Findings and Implications

Environmental Science
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Key Findings and Implications

Environmental Science
01 May 2026

Key Findings and Implications of a Scientific Investigation

The key findings and implications sections of a scientific investigation represent the intellectual culmination of the research process. They require students to move beyond describing data to interpreting what that data means — for the research question specifically and for broader environmental understanding.

What Are Key Findings?

Key findings are the most important, evidence-supported conclusions drawn from the primary data collected.

A key finding:
- Directly answers the research question
- Is supported by specific data (cite values, trends, statistical comparisons)
- Is accurate — does not overstate what the data shows
- Acknowledges the scope and limitations of the evidence

Structure of a Key Finding Statement

A strong key finding statement includes:
1. What was observed (the pattern in the data)
2. The direction and magnitude of the effect (not just ‘there was a difference’)
3. Connection to the hypothesis (supported or not supported)

Weak finding: ‘Biodiversity was higher in native vegetation.’

Strong finding: ‘The mean SID for native vegetation sites (0.72 ± 0.04) was significantly higher than for cleared pasture sites (0.31 ± 0.08), supporting the hypothesis that vegetation cover positively influences species diversity. This suggests that even patches of remnant native vegetation in agricultural landscapes support substantially greater biodiversity than adjacent cleared land.’

Distinguishing Findings from Discussion

Section Focus
Results What the data shows (describe, don’t interpret)
Findings The most important patterns — what we can conclude from the data
Discussion Why the findings make sense; how they connect to prior knowledge; what they mean
Implications What the findings mean beyond the investigation itself

What Are Implications?

Implications are the broader meanings, consequences or applications of the investigation’s findings.

Implications may be:
- Scientific: What does this add to understanding of the ecological/climate/energy system studied?
- Practical/management: What should be done differently based on this finding?
- Policy: Does this finding support or challenge existing environmental policies?
- Further research: What new questions do these findings raise?

Levels of Implication

Level Example
Local/site ‘These results suggest that retaining remnant vegetation patches in the Gippsland region supports biodiversity and should be a priority for local government land management’
Landscape/regional ‘Wildlife corridor connectivity appears to be a significant driver of species diversity and should inform regional biodiversity strategies’
National/global ‘These findings align with international research on the importance of habitat connectivity for biodiversity in fragmented agricultural landscapes’

Connecting Findings to Sustainability Principles

Implications often connect to sustainability principles:

Example investigation: Comparing soil carbon storage in native grassland vs. grazed pasture.

  • Key finding: Native grassland had 2.4× higher soil organic carbon content than grazed pasture (42.3 g/kg vs. 17.5 g/kg)
  • Implication (conservation of biodiversity/ecological integrity): Protecting and restoring native grasslands would significantly enhance carbon storage and support biodiversity
  • Implication (intergenerational equity): Maintaining native grassland carbon stocks preserves this resource for future generations and contributes to climate mitigation
  • Implication (policy): Native grassland protection and carbon farming incentives should be strengthened

Acknowledging the Scope of Findings

Findings must not be over-generalised beyond what the data supports:

Scope constraints:
- ‘These findings apply to [specific habitat/region/season] and may not generalise to all contexts’
- ‘The small sample size limits the confidence with which these findings can be applied to the broader landscape’
- ‘Further investigation across multiple seasons and additional sites would be needed to confirm these patterns’

Writing About Findings in a Poster Context

In a scientific poster, key findings should:
- Be prominent — the most visible content after the title
- Be expressed as clear, direct statements — readers should immediately grasp what was found
- Be supported by a figure — each key finding paired with the data that demonstrates it
- Avoid hedging language that obscures the result (‘there may possibly have been a slight tendency towards somewhat higher diversity…’)

VCAA FOCUS: The discussion and conclusion sections of the investigation are among the most heavily weighted. VCAA assessors look for: evidence of genuine engagement with what the data means; honest acknowledgement of limitations; connection to relevant environmental science concepts; and implications that are realistic given the scale and scope of the investigation.

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