Benjamin S. Halpern

Benjamin S. Halpern

University of California, Santa Barbara

H-index: 111

North America-United States

About Benjamin S. Halpern

Benjamin S. Halpern, With an exceptional h-index of 111 and a recent h-index of 86 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at University of California, Santa Barbara, specializes in the field of Marine ecology, conservation biology.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Corrigendum to" Conflict and alignment on aquaculture among Californian communities"[Aquaculture Volume 580 Part 1, 15 February 2024, 740230]

No branch left behind: tracking terrestrial biodiversity from a phylogenetic completeness perspective

Biodiversity monitoring for a just planetary future

Mapping invasive iceplant extent in southern coastal California using high-resolution aerial imagery

Could fish aggregation at ocean aquaculture augment wild populations and local fisheries?

The future of ecosystem assessments is automation, collaboration, and artificial intelligence

Cumulative human impacts on global marine fauna highlight risk to fragile functional diversity of marine ecosystems

Biological life‐history and farming scenarios of marine aquaculture to help reduce wild marine fishing pressure

Benjamin S. Halpern Information

University

Position

Professor Bren School of Environmental Science and Management

Citations(all)

73544

Citations(since 2020)

35355

Cited By

53068

hIndex(all)

111

hIndex(since 2020)

86

i10Index(all)

248

i10Index(since 2020)

227

Email

University Profile Page

University of California, Santa Barbara

Google Scholar

View Google Scholar Profile

Benjamin S. Halpern Skills & Research Interests

Marine ecology

conservation biology

Top articles of Benjamin S. Halpern

Title

Journal

Author(s)

Publication Date

Corrigendum to" Conflict and alignment on aquaculture among Californian communities"[Aquaculture Volume 580 Part 1, 15 February 2024, 740230]

Aquaculture

Caitlin R Fong

Claire M Gonzales

Mae Rennick

Heather J Lahr

Luke D Gardner

...

2024/3

No branch left behind: tracking terrestrial biodiversity from a phylogenetic completeness perspective

Jesús N Pinto‐Ledezma

Sandra Díaz

Benjamin S Halpern

Colin Khoury

Jeannine Cavender‐Bares

2024/3

Biodiversity monitoring for a just planetary future

Science

Melissa Chapman

Benjamin R Goldstein

Christopher J Schell

Justin S Brashares

Neil H Carter

...

2024/1/5

Mapping invasive iceplant extent in southern coastal California using high-resolution aerial imagery

Ecological Informatics

Carmen Galaz García

Julien Brun

Benjamin S Halpern

2024/7/1

Could fish aggregation at ocean aquaculture augment wild populations and local fisheries?

Plos one

Jessica L Couture

Darcy Bradley

Benjamin S Halpern

Steven D Gaines

2024/4/17

The future of ecosystem assessments is automation, collaboration, and artificial intelligence

Environmental Research Letters

Carmen Galaz García

Kenneth J Bagstad

Julien Brun

Rebecca Chaplin-Kramer

Trevor Dhu

...

2023

Cumulative human impacts on global marine fauna highlight risk to fragile functional diversity of marine ecosystems

Authorea Preprints

Casey O'Hara

Melanie Frazier

Mireia Valle

Nathalie Butt

Kristin Kaschner

...

2023/5/5

Biological life‐history and farming scenarios of marine aquaculture to help reduce wild marine fishing pressure

Fish and Fisheries

Halley E Froehlich

Jamie C Montgomery

David R Williams

Casey O'Hara

Caitlin D Kuempel

...

2023/11

Priorities for synthesis research in ecology and environmental science

Ecosphere

Benjamin S Halpern

Carl Boettiger

Michael C Dietze

Jessica A Gephart

Patrick Gonzalez

...

2023/1/1

Four ways blue foods can help achieve food system ambitions across nations

Nature

Beatrice I Crona

Emmy Wassénius

Malin Jonell

J Zachary Koehn

Rebecca Short

...

2023/4/6

Vulnerability of blue foods to human-induced environmental change

Nature Sustainability

Ling Cao

Benjamin S Halpern

Max Troell

Rebecca Short

Cong Zeng

...

2023/10

Environmental footprints of farmed chicken and salmon bridge the land and sea

Current Biology

Caitlin D Kuempel

Melanie Frazier

Juliette Verstaen

Paul-Eric Rayner

Julia L Blanchard

...

2023/3/13

Reply to: Global effects of marine protected areas on food security are unknown

Nature

Enric Sala

Juan Mayorga

Darcy Bradley

Reniel B Cabral

Trisha B Atwood

...

2023/9/21

Biocultural vulnerability exposes threats of culturally important species

Victoria Reyes-García

Rodrigo Cámara-Leret

Benjamin S Halpern

Casey O’hara

Delphine Renard

...

2023/1/10

Model-based scenarios for achieving net negative emissions in the food system

PLoS Climate

Maya Almaraz

Benjamin Z Houlton

Michael Clark

Iris Holzer

Yanqiu Zhou

...

2023/9/6

Global yield from aquaculture systems

Caitlin R Fong

Claire M Gonzales

Mae Rennick

Luke D Gardner

Benjamin S Halpern

...

2023/12/5

INAUGURAL ARTICLE by a Recently Elected Academy Member: Biocultural vulnerability exposes threats of culturally important species

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

Tori M Hoehler

Dylan J Mankel

Peter R Girguis

Thomas M McCollom

Nancy Y Kiang

...

2023/6/6

Reply to: Quantifying the carbon benefits of ending bottom trawling

Nature

Trisha B Atwood

Enric Sala

Juan Mayorga

Darcy Bradley

Reniel B Cabral

...

2023/5/11

Reply to: The environmental footprint of fisheries

Nature Sustainability

Benjamin S Halpern

Melanie Frazier

Paul-Eric Rayner

Gage Clawson

Julia L Blanchard

...

2023/11

An Evaluation Framework for Risk of Coastal Marine Ecological Diversity Loss From Land-Based Impacts

Frontiers in Marine Science

Paige Hoel

Alexa Fredston

Benjamin S Halpern

2022/4/8

See List of Professors in Benjamin S. Halpern University(University of California, Santa Barbara)