Abstract
The high diversity of fish species found in Brazilian streams has attracted scientific interest in recent years. However, it is not clear how studies have addressed biodiversity knowledge shortfalls. We conducted a scientometric analysis of stream fish studies in Brazil to identify trends and gaps in how objectives, spatial coverage, and biodiversity knowledge shortfalls have been studied. Our review covered 690 articles published between 1981 and 2019, and we found an increase in the number of publications, the spatial scale of studies, and the number of streams studied. We also found biases in the distribution of publications concerning regions, biomes, basins, and biodiversity knowledge shortfalls. The Southeast region, the Parana River basin, the Atlantic Forest biome, and the Hutchinsonian shortfall contributed to a greater number of studies while the Northeast region, the Pantanal biome, Parnaiba basin, Western Northeast Atlantic basin, and the Prestonian shortfall were less represented. Therefore, to improve our knowledge about stream fish, we recommend new collection efforts in under-sampled regions and new studies focused on filling less-addressed biodiversity knowledge shortfalls. Moreover, we emphasize the importance of standardized sampling protocols, a complete sharing of data, and an increase in scientific collaboration.
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