A Bibliometric Analysis and a Citation Mapping Process for the Role of Soil Recycled Organic Matter and Microbe Interaction due to Climate Change Using Scopus Database

Author:

Vagelas Ioannis1ORCID,Leontopoulos Stefanos2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Agriculture Crop Production and Rural Development, University of Thessaly, Fytokou Str., N. Ionia, 38446 Volos, Greece

2. School of Applied Arts and Sustainable Design, Hellenic Open University, Parodos Aristotelous 18, 26335 Patras, Greece

Abstract

Climate change has drawn the attention not only of scientists but of politicians and societies worldwide. The aim of this paper is to present a method for selecting research studies on climate change, waste management and the role of microbes in the recycling of organic matter in soil that analyze the role of organic agriculture as the main connection between agricultural losses and climate change. VOSviewer version 1.6.18 free software tool was used in this study in order to achieve the bibliometric and mapping approach for studies on the effects of climate change in terms of soil recycled organic matter and microbe interaction. Scopus database (accessed 29 September 2022) indexed a total of 1,245,809 bibliographic items classified into paradigms. The presented documents were downloaded from Scopus as graph-based maps and as distance-based maps in order to reflect the strength of the relation between the items. Climate change includes changes in soil and soil microorganisms as affected by natural climate variations and local weather, which have beneficial or negative effects on soil organic matter. From the examination of the selected papers, it was concluded that climate change and changing precipitation patterns are having an impact on microorganisms, particularly bacterial groups, and thus ecosystem function.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Engineering (miscellaneous),Horticulture,Food Science,Agronomy and Crop Science

Reference154 articles.

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2. Ritzer, G. (2016). Blackwell Encyclopedia of Sociology, Blackwell.

3. Royal Society (2020). Climate Change. Evidence and Causes. An Overview from the Royal Society and the US National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Sciences and Royal Society.

4. Climate change education;Ghosh;Curr. Sci.,2016

5. Climate change and the ecologist;Thuiller;Nature,2007

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