I will give you the exact answer, Mr. Gonzales: it is 1%.
Of those 182 publications, two are in French. I'm asking you this question to get at another problem: How do we get the public interested in citizen science if the scientific content that might interest them is not available in their language?
I understand that English is the lingua franca of science, but we must also understand that in Quebec and francophone communities in Canada, the relationship between French and English is not the same as in the rest of the world. I would like to hear your thoughts on that.
The mobilization of scientific knowledge in French in Quebec, and even in francophone communities outside Quebec, is certainly inadequate. Isn't this an inequality, and even a barrier to science as a lever for economic and social development for francophones?