| Literature DB >> 30925692 |
Lilian de C Moraes Pinto1, José G Dórea2, José Vicente Elias Bernardi3, Leonardo Fernandes Gomes4.
Abstract
Because the Amazon rain forest is ecologically relevant on a global scale, we applied scientometric techniques to integrate studies dealing with mercury research in this unique ecosystem between 1991 and 2017. Using a combination of co-authorship and co-citation analyses, keyword mapping and overlay visualization of topics in the field, this article identified three major areas in the 26-year period of mercury research: (1) human exposure to mercury (artisanal small-scale gold mining-ASGM) and methylmercury through fish consumption, and their respective risks for human health; (2) mercury accumulation in the environment and its relation to ASGM and atmospheric concentration; and (3) mercury geochemistry and its presence in soils, sediments, and water. The paper also identified the leading institutions related to the published research and respective influential scholars in the context of this study. Overall, the analyses revealed patterns of convergence and divergence between authors, specialization, and interdisciplinary engagement in mercury investigation, thus highlighting strengths and weaknesses of research topics in the field. This scientometric approach could be a useful tool to monitor/assess the implementation of the Minamata Convention.Entities:
Keywords: co-authorship analysis; co-citation analysis; methylmercury; scientometry; tropical rain forest
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30925692 PMCID: PMC6479522 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16071111
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Number of publications about mercury in the Amazon between the years 1991 and 2017.
Figure 2(a) Main authors and (b) institutions that most published about mercury in the Amazon between the years 1991 and 2017. Abbreviations: Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ); Universidade de Brasília (UnB); Universidade de São Paulo (USP); Universidade Federal do Pará (UFPA); Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM), Canada; Universidade Federal Fluminense (UFF); Universidade de Campinas (Unicamp); Universidade Federal de Rondônia (UNIR); the National Institute for Minamata Disease (NIMD), Japan; and The University of British Columbia (UBC), Canada.
Figure 3Co-authorship network regarding Hg research in the Amazon between 1991 and 2017.
Most common authors on Hg in twelve clusters in the Amazon co-authorship network, inferred from 546 publications from 1991 through 2017.
| No. | Cluster Members (1) | Core Research Areas | Period |
|---|---|---|---|
| 01 | Malm, O. (34), Bastos, W. (24), Dórea, J. (22), Bernardi, J. (10), Diez, S. (8), Barbosa, A. (5), Fonseca, M. (5), Forsberg, B. (6), Guimarães, J. (9), Lacerda, L. (9), and Marques, R. (12). | Gold mining as a source of mercury exposure; spatial-temporal dynamics and sources of total Hg; neurological effects of Hg contamination in children; Hg bioaccumulation and biomagnification. | 1991–2017 |
| 02 | Pinheiro, M. (13), Crespo-Lopez, M. (8), Nascimento, J. (6), Herculano, A. (8), Muller, R. (7), Sarkis, J. (7), Silveira, L. (6), Oikawa, T. (6), and Vieira, J. (6). | Genotoxicity and health effects in humans exposed to Hg, especially women and children from riverside communities. | 2000–2017 |
| 03 | Lucotte, M. (30), Mergler, D. (29), Amorim, M. (8), Farella, N. (7), Lebel, J. (6), Passos, C. (5), Rheault, I. (5), and Roulet, M. (15). | Geochemistry of mercury in soils, sediments, and water; neurotoxic effects of low-level methylmercury contamination; the relation between fish consumption and human contamination; and the way anthropogenic factors influence mercury dynamics. | 1996–2017 |
| 04 | Guimarães, J. (21), Bastos, W. (9), Akagi, H. (12), Pfeiffer, W. (11), Favaro, D. (5), Fostier, A. (6), Kehrig, H. (5), Vasconcellos, M. (5), and Branches, F. (9). | Hg pollution in gold mining areas and manmade reservoirs, concerning mainly mercury levels in riverine and indigenous populations. | 1991–2006 |
| 05 | Boudou, A. (7), Bourdineaud, J. (5), Charlet, L. (5), Cossa, D. (7), Grimaldi, M. (7), Guedron, S. (6), Maury-Brachet, R. (8), and Richard, S. (5). | Hg in aquatic environments and the effects from gold mining in fish and human contamination, with a unique focus on the part of the Amazonian basin that is found in French Guiana. | 2001–2014 |
| 06 | Cleary, D. (5), Brabo, E. (13), Camara, V. (6), de Jesus, I. (5), Loureiro, E. (5), Mascarenhas, A. (6), and Santos, E. (14). | Hg contamination in fish and riverside communities, especially in children. | 2000–2015 |
| 07 | Barbosa, F. (14), Grotto, D. (9), Garcia, S. (5) Valentini, J. (5), Braga, G. (5), and Barcelos, G. (7) | Molecular behavior of mercury and its genetic effects in humans. | 2009–2015 |
| 08 | Barbosa, A. (12), Dórea, J. (10), Boischio, A. (6), Jardim, W. (9), de Souza, J. (5), and Ferrari, I. (6). | Hg contamination in fish and in hair of different populations; fish consumption and nutritional status; mercury exposure and serum antinuclear antibody; cardiovascular risks of Hg contamination; Hg bioaccumulation and biomagnification. | 1995–2010 |
| 09 | Fillion, M. (8), Lemire, M. (9), Mertens, F. (5), Nyland, J. (6), and Silbergeld, E. (6). | Hg molecular behavior; Hg contamination in a fish-eating population, neurotoxic sequelae; mercury and selenium concentration patterns. | 2007–2017 |
| 10 | Lacerda, L. (18), Bidone, E. (7), Campos, R. (7), Castilhos, Z. (11), and Hacon, S. (9). | Ichthyofauna and human exposure to mercury through fish consumption. | 1991–2004 |
| 11 | Jardim, W. (5), Fadini, P. (5), Fostier, A. (6), and da Silva, G. (5). | Mercury chemistry, including the part played by dissolved organic matter in the mercury cycle, gaseous mercury and mercury in the environment (soil, water, sediments, and air). | 2001–2010 |
| 12 | Hylander, L. (6), Meili, M. (5), and Silva, E. (6) | Hg in the environment, particularly in Alto Pantanal; global mercury pollution and expected changes. | 2000–2006 |
Source: Research data. 1 Refers to the number of articles published by the author within the corpus.
Figure 4Networks of associations among the most used words in the titles and abstracts of publications on mercury in the Amazon between 1991 and 2017. The colors represent the clustering between them.
Main keywords ranked by frequency in papers dealing with mercury in the Amazon.
| Rank | Title and Abstract Words | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Mercury | 238 |
| 2 | Amazon | 212 |
| 3 | Methylmercury | 195 |
| 4 | Fish | 147 |
| 5 | Brazilian Amazon | 139 |
| 6 | Brazil | 116 |
| 7 | Contamination | 98 |
| 8 | Exposure | 96 |
| 9 | Pollution | 86 |
| 10 | Fish consumption | 70 |
| 11 | Hair | 64 |
| 12 | Basin | 59 |
| 13 | Sediments | 55 |
| 14 | Bioaccumulation | 42 |
| 15 | Water | 42 |
Source: Research data.
Ranking of the top 10 most cited papers within the articles analyzed.
| 1991–2017 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rank | Authors (Year) | Cit. 1 | Co-Cit. 2 | Journal | Impact Factor (JCR) |
| 1 | Malm, O.; Branches, F.; Akagi, H.; Castro, M.B.; Pfeiffer, W.C.; Harada, M.; et al. (1995) | 168 | 80 | Science of the Total Environment | 4.610 |
| 2 | Malm, O. (1998) | 294 | 78 | Environmental Research | 4.732 |
| 3 | Lebel, J.; Roulet, M.; Mergler, D.; Lucotte, M.; Larribe, F. (1997) | 114 | 75 | Water, Air, and Soil Pollution | 1.769 |
| 4 | Roulet, M.; Lucotte, M.; Farella, N.; Serique, G.; Coelho, H.; Passos, C.J.S.; et al. (1999) | 138 | 75 | Water, Air, and Soil Pollution | 1.769 |
| 5 | Malm, O.; Pfeiffer, W.C.; Souza, C.M.M.; Reuther, R. (1990) | 162 | 72 | AMBIO | 3.616 |
| 6 | Roulet, M.; Lucotte, M.; Saint-Aubin, A.; Tran, S.; Rheault, I.; Farella, N.; et al. (1998) | 137 | 70 | Science of the Total Environment | 4.610 |
| 7 | Akagi, H.; Malm, O.; Branches, F.J.P.; Kashima, Y.; Guimaraes, J.R.D.; et al. (1995) | 118 | 68 | Water, Air, and Soil Pollution | 1.769 |
| 8 | Fadini, P.S.; Jardim, W.F. (2001) | 102 | 67 | Science of the Total Environment | 4.610 |
| 9 | Lebel, J.; Mergler, D.; Lucotte, M.; Amorim, M.; Larribe, F.; Dolbec, J. (1998) | 194 | 62 | Environmental Research | 4.732 |
| 10 | Pfeiffer, W.C.; Lacerda, L.D. (1988) | 121 | 60 | Environmental Technology Letters | NA |
| Total citations | 1548 | 707 | |||
Source: Research data. 1 the number of global citations is presented in the column headed Citation; 2 the Co-Citation column represents the number of citations received within the 546 articles considered in the analysis, at the moment of the data gathering. JCR: Journal Citation Report. NA: Not available.
Figure A1Reference networks about mercury research in the Amazon between 1991 and 2017. The colors represent the clustering between them.