Chemical and Biological Technologies in Agriculture (Jun 2023)

The visualized knowledge map and hot topic analysis of glomalin-related soil proteins in the carbon field based on Citespace

  • Ci Deng,
  • Ying-Ning Zou,
  • Abeer Hashem,
  • Kamil Kuča,
  • Elsayed Fathi Abd-Allah,
  • Qiang-Sheng Wu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40538-023-00428-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) in the soil have many positive effects on growth, nutrient acquisition, and stress tolerance of host plants, as well as soil fertility, soil structure, and soil ecology. Glomalin-related soil proteins (GRSP) are a mixture of humic substances and heat-stable glycoproteins, primarily of AMF origin. GRSP are as an important component of soil organic carbon (C) pools, which can stabilize and sequestrate C, thus reducing soil C emissions for slowing down global warming. Based on the CiteSpace software and the core collection of Web of Science as the database, this study made a visual analysis of GRSP’s literature in the C field published from 1999 to 2022, including the number of publications, countries, institutions, co-cited literature, keywords, top cited papers, etc. The study regarding the GRSP in the C field could be divided into the initial stage (1999–2009), the steady stage (2010–2018), and the explosive stage (2019–2022). The Chinese Academy of Sciences is the organization with the most publications, and the United States, China, and India are the three leading nations in the C field of GRSP. However, there was little collaboration among the participating countries and the study’s institutions. The focus of the research has shifted from the composition and content of GRSP in C to the question of whether C in GRSP affects soil properties. Future research was also prospected. Graphical Abstract

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