Abstract

Ecosystem services in bolstering human well-being and steering environmental management garnered increasing recognition. In this realm, the Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) rose as an instrumental tool in ecosystem services. The heterogeneous applications of SWAT across diverse studies underscore an imperative for bibliometric analysis to decipher these evolving trends. This study endeavors to execute a comprehensive analysis of SWAT's application for ecosystem services, delineating key thematic development and exploring its utilization in ecosystem services. We conducted a comprehensive literature review by searching the Web of Science database, retrieving a total of 534 articles. The CiteSpace facilitated our co-citation analysis, enabling the identification of seminal publications and burgeoning themes within SWAT. Our analysis delineated thematic development in SWAT pertaining to ecosystem services. Initially concentrated on hydrological processes, the focus progressively broadened to encompass comprehensive ecosystem services evaluations. We examined 81 peer-reviewed publications directly related to ecosystem services, and most of them addressed certain ecosystem services, such as water yield, soil retention, regulation of water flow, food, and carbon storage. SWAT holds a unique advantage in quantifying water-related processes. Future studies should focus more on ecosystem service flows based on SWAT, which contributes to elucidating the relationship between nature and humans, facilitating comprehensive ecosystem management.

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