Abstract
Geometric morphometrics is an important component of quantitative research on insect morphology, widely applied in taxonomy, intraspecific variation, and phylogenetic studies. However, systematic research in this field remains limited, with few comprehensive summaries of research trends, hotspots, and core theories. This study, based on scientometric methods, analyzed 1321 publications indexed in the Web of Science database up to 31 December 2025, and presents a meta-scientific review from a macro perspective, revealing the research trends, hotspots, and future directions in the field. The results show that: (1) annual publications exhibit overall growth, while research methods evolved from single landmark analysis to multimodal and interdisciplinary approaches; (2) scientists from Brazil, the USA, and France are major contributors, with studies spanning morphology, taxonomy, and ecology; (3) taxonomic studies centered on wing shape analysis constitutes a major research hotspot, closely related to phylogeny, allometry, and sexual dimorphism; (4) highly co-cited studies provide the main theoretical and methodological foundations for the field. Future research, building on existing hotspots, will further integrate geometric morphometrics with genomics, ecological functional data, three-dimensional geometric morphometrics, and artificial intelligence-assisted approaches to advance integrative taxonomy within interdisciplinary and data-driven frameworks.