4.0 Article

What's hot and what's not - Identifying publication trends in insect ecology

Journal

AUSTRAL ECOLOGY
Volume 47, Issue 1, Pages 5-16

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/aec.13052

Keywords

entomology; insects; publication trends; review; structural topic modelling; taxonomy

Categories

Funding

  1. Ecological Society of Australia

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Research shows that topics such as 'Community ecology', 'Traits, life history & physiology' have become more prevalent in the past 20 years, while topics like 'Population modelling' and 'Insect development' have declined in prevalence. Hot topics in insect ecology literature include 'Thermal tolerance' and 'Disease vectors', while cold topics consist of 'Herbivore phenology', 'Insect-plant interactions', and 'Parasitoids and parasites'. It was also observed that 'Landscape ecology' is a growing topic area in both corpora.
Research disciplines in science have historically developed in silos but are increasingly multidisciplinary. Here, we assessed how the insect ecology literature published in ecological and entomological journals has developed over the last 20 years and which topics have crossed discipline boundaries. We used structural topic modelling to assess research trends from 34 304 articles published in six ecology journals and six entomology journals between 2000 and 2020. We then identified and compared topics that emerged from the entire body of literature, or corpus, with topics that emerged from a subsection of articles that focused only on insects (insect corpus). We found that, within the entire corpus, topics on 'Community ecology', 'Traits, life history & physiology' and 'Ecological methods & theory' became more prevalent over time (hot topics), whereas 'Population modelling', 'Insect development', 'Reproduction & ontogeny' and 'Plant growth' declined in prevalence over the 20 years we surveyed (cold topics). In the insect corpus, we found that hot topics included 'Thermal tolerance' and 'Disease vectors', whereas cold topics included 'Herbivore phenology', 'Insect-plant interactions' and 'Parasitoids and parasites'. 'Landscape ecology' was a growth topic area for both corpora. Our findings suggest that insect-related research is a major component of the broader ecological discipline, and there are topics in ecology where insect research aligns with general ecological trends. However, specific topics unique to the insect corpora - such as insect taxonomy - are fundamental to both insect and ecology research. in Spanish and Portugese is available with online material.

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