AI Article Synopsis

  • - The agri-food industry contributes significantly to global waste, prompting interest in utilizing agri-food by-products to create sustainable fish feed, with research on this topic growing at 18.65% annually from 2019 to 2022.
  • - A study analyzed 922 research papers from various countries, identifying Dawood M.A.O. as the leading author and noting China as the most productive nation in this field.
  • - Key research areas include sustainable aquaculture, the use of waste in fish feed, and the development of a circular economy, highlighting the increasing academic focus on self-sufficient fish feed from agri-food waste.

Article Abstract

The global agri-food industry generates a large volume of waste annually, which causes both environmental and economic problems. Recently, there has been a growing interest in the use of agri-food wastes and by-products to produce self-sufficient fish feed. This study aimed to analyze the intellectual structure of the recent research on the utilization of agri-food wastes and by-products as self-sufficient fish feed materials based on 922 Scopus-indexed core collection documents from 252 journals written by 4420 authors from 73 countries with an annual growth rate of 18.65% over the last four years (2019-2022). This bibliometric study implemented knowledge domain visualization (KDV) using VOSViewer and Biblioshiny in the Bibliometrix R-package to investigate the basic scientometric profile of the selected fields. The results showed that Dawood M.A.O., with PageRanks of 0.0732, 19 total publications, 695 global citations from 2019 to 2022, and closeness values of 0.25, was the most productive author within the field. Subsequently, China was determined to be the most productive country (93 valid documents) and have the strongest collaboration network. Major research hotspots in the field included aquaculture and sustainable aquaculture, fish feed with agri-food waste, rainbow trout species, the development of a circular economy, probiotic applications, and cell signaling cytokines and peptides. This bibliometric study provides comprehensive information on the intellectual domain and research landscape on self-sufficient fish feed and also shows how interest in this research topic and similar ones is growing.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10336519PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e17573DOI Listing

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