Land (Apr 2024)

Research Progress in the Field of Peatlands in 1990–2022: A Systematic Analysis Based on Bibliometrics

  • Jianzong Shi,
  • Wenhao Liu,
  • Ren Li,
  • Xiaodong Wu,
  • Tonghua Wu,
  • Lin Zhao,
  • Junjie Ma,
  • Shenning Wang,
  • Yao Xiao,
  • Guojie Hu,
  • Yongliang Jiao,
  • Dong Wang,
  • Xianhua Wei,
  • Peiqing Lou,
  • Yongping Qiao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/land13040549
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 4
p. 549

Abstract

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Peatlands are major natural carbon pool in terrestrial ecosystems globally and are essential to a variety of fields, including global ecology, hydrology, and ecosystem services. Under the context of climate change, the management and conservation of peatlands has become a topic of international concern. Nevertheless, few studies have yet systematized the overall international dynamics of existing peatland research. In this study, based on an approach integrating bibliometrics and a literature review, we systematically analyzed peatland research from a literature perspective. Alongside traditional bibliometric analyses (e.g., number of publications, research impact, and hot areas), recent top keywords in peatland research were found, including ‘oil palm’, ‘tropical peatland’, ‘permafrost’, and so on. Furthermore, six hot topics of peatland research were identified: (1) peatland development and the impacts and degradations, (2) the history of peatland development and factors of formation, (3) chemical element contaminants in peatlands, (4) tropical peatlands, (5) peat adsorption and its humic acids, and (6) the influence of peatland conservation on the ecosystem. In addition, this review found that the adverse consequences of peatland degradation in the context of climate change merit greater attention, that peatland-mapping techniques suitable for all regions are lacking, that a unified global assessment of carbon stocks in peatlands urgently needs to be established, spanning all countries, and that a reliable system for assessing peatland-ecosystem services needs to be implemented expeditiously. In this study, we argued that enhanced integration in research will bridge knowledge gaps and facilitate the systematic synthesis of peatlands as complex systems, which is an imperative need.

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