The changes in zoological publication rates and focal subdisciplines between 1960 and 2022

Author:

LUO Tianbao1,LI Liyu1,WANG Qian1,LIU Wentong1,GUO Jinyu1,YAN Yimei1,CHRIS Newman2,ZHOU Youbing13,ZHAO Jin13

Affiliation:

1. College of Biological & Pharmaceutical Sciences China Three Gorges University Yichang China

2. Wildlife Conservation Research Unit, Department of Biology University of Oxford Oxford UK

3. Hubei International Scientific and Technological Cooperation Center of Ecological Conservation and Management in Three Gorges Area China Three Gorges University Yichang China

Abstract

AbstractSince ancient times, zoology, as the branch of biology dealing with animals, has been a cornerstone of natural science and has developed substantially over the last century. We conducted a bibliometric analysis using structural topic modeling (STM) to determine changes in the representation of principal zoological subdisciplines in the literature between 1960 and 2022. We collated a corpus of 217 414 articles from 88 top‐ranked zoology journals and identified three main fields: (i) ecology, (ii) evolution, and (iii) applied research. Within these, we identified 10 major subdisciplines. The number of studies published per year grew from 118 in 1960 to 6635 in 2022. Macroscale‐related subdisciplines increased while classical and traditional subdisciplines decreased. Mammals (34.4%) and insects (18.1%) were the dominant taxa covered, followed by birds (15.2%) and fish (8.0%). Research on mammals, insects, and fish involved a broad range of subdisciplines, whereas studies of birds focused on ecological subdisciplines. Most publications were from the United States, followed by the United Kingdom, Germany, Canada, Australia, China, and Japan, with two developing countries, China and South Africa among the top 15 countries. There were different subdiscipline biases between countries, and the gross domestic product of each country correlated positively with its publication output (R2 = 0.681). We discuss our findings in the context of advances in technological innovations and computing power, as well as the emergence of ecology as a formal sister discipline, driven by changing environmental pressures and societal values. We caution that valuable publications from traditional zoological fields must not be completely supplanted by more contemporary topics and increasingly sophisticated analyses.

Publisher

Wiley

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