Toxic habits: an analysis of general trends and biases in snake venom research

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Toxic habits: an analysis of general trends and biases in snake venom research. / Avella, Ignazio; Wüster, Wolfgang; Luiselli, Luca et al.
In: Toxins, Vol. 14, No. 12, 884, 17.12.2022, p. 884.

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Avella, I, Wüster, W, Luiselli, L & Martínez-Freiría, F 2022, 'Toxic habits: an analysis of general trends and biases in snake venom research', Toxins, vol. 14, no. 12, 884, pp. 884. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxins14120884

APA

Avella, I., Wüster, W., Luiselli, L., & Martínez-Freiría, F. (2022). Toxic habits: an analysis of general trends and biases in snake venom research. Toxins, 14(12), 884. Article 884. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxins14120884

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MLA

VancouverVancouver

Avella I, Wüster W, Luiselli L, Martínez-Freiría F. Toxic habits: an analysis of general trends and biases in snake venom research. Toxins. 2022 Dec 17;14(12):884. 884. doi: 10.3390/toxins14120884

Author

Avella, Ignazio ; Wüster, Wolfgang ; Luiselli, Luca et al. / Toxic habits: an analysis of general trends and biases in snake venom research. In: Toxins. 2022 ; Vol. 14, No. 12. pp. 884.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Toxic habits: an analysis of general trends and biases in snake venom research

AU - Avella, Ignazio

AU - Wüster, Wolfgang

AU - Luiselli, Luca

AU - Martínez-Freiría, Fernando

PY - 2022/12/17

Y1 - 2022/12/17

N2 - Biases in snake venom research have been partially identified but seldomly quantified. Using the Google Scholar web search engine, we collected a total of 267 articles published between 1964 and 2021, and reviewed them to assess the main trends in this field of study. We developed a 4-category classification of the harmful potential of each of the 298 snake species retrieved from the analysed publications, and tested whether taxonomy, realm of origin, and/or assigned hazard category could affect how often each of them appeared in the articles considered. Overall, viperids were significantly more represented than any other snake taxon retrieved. The Neotropics were the most represented biogeographic realm for number of studied species, whereas information about the country of origin of the analysed specimens was often incomplete. The vast majority of the publications focused on snake venom characterisation, whereas more ecology-related topics were rarely considered. Hazard category and biogeographic realm of origin of each species had a significant effect on the number of articles dedicated to it, suggesting that a snake's harmful potential and place of origin influence its popularity in venom studies. Our analysis showed an overall positive trend in the number of snake venom studies published yearly, but also underlined severe neglect of snake families of supposedly minor medical relevance (e.g., Atractaspididae), underrepresentation of some of the areas most impacted by snakebite (i.e., Indomalayan and Afrotropic realms), and limited interest in the ecological and functional context of snake venom.

AB - Biases in snake venom research have been partially identified but seldomly quantified. Using the Google Scholar web search engine, we collected a total of 267 articles published between 1964 and 2021, and reviewed them to assess the main trends in this field of study. We developed a 4-category classification of the harmful potential of each of the 298 snake species retrieved from the analysed publications, and tested whether taxonomy, realm of origin, and/or assigned hazard category could affect how often each of them appeared in the articles considered. Overall, viperids were significantly more represented than any other snake taxon retrieved. The Neotropics were the most represented biogeographic realm for number of studied species, whereas information about the country of origin of the analysed specimens was often incomplete. The vast majority of the publications focused on snake venom characterisation, whereas more ecology-related topics were rarely considered. Hazard category and biogeographic realm of origin of each species had a significant effect on the number of articles dedicated to it, suggesting that a snake's harmful potential and place of origin influence its popularity in venom studies. Our analysis showed an overall positive trend in the number of snake venom studies published yearly, but also underlined severe neglect of snake families of supposedly minor medical relevance (e.g., Atractaspididae), underrepresentation of some of the areas most impacted by snakebite (i.e., Indomalayan and Afrotropic realms), and limited interest in the ecological and functional context of snake venom.

KW - Snakes

KW - Venom

KW - Trends

KW - Bibliometrics

KW - Research biases

KW - Review

U2 - 10.3390/toxins14120884

DO - 10.3390/toxins14120884

M3 - Review article

C2 - 36548781

VL - 14

SP - 884

JO - Toxins

JF - Toxins

SN - 2072-6651

IS - 12

M1 - 884

ER -