Elizabeth Clare

About Elizabeth Clare

Elizabeth Clare, With an exceptional h-index of 38 and a recent h-index of 32 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at Queen Mary University of London, specializes in the field of molecular ecology, systematics, environmental DNA.

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

Variable responses of individual species to tropical forest degradation

The diets of bats: Think outside the guild

High frequency environmental DNA metabarcoding provides rapid and effective monitoring of fish community dynamics

Air-quality networks collect environmental DNA with the potential to measure biodiversity at continental scales

Changes in trophic ecology of mobile predators in response to rainforest degradation

Out of thin air: surveying tropical bat roosts through air sampling of eDNA

Answers blowing in the wind: Detection of birds, mammals, and amphibians with airborne environmental DNA in a natural environment over a yearlong survey

Airborne eDNA documents a diverse and ecologically complex tropical bat and other mammal community

Elizabeth Clare Information

University

Position

___

Citations(all)

6057

Citations(since 2020)

3636

Cited By

3820

hIndex(all)

38

hIndex(since 2020)

32

i10Index(all)

62

i10Index(since 2020)

56

Email

University Profile Page

Google Scholar

Elizabeth Clare Skills & Research Interests

molecular ecology

systematics

environmental DNA

Top articles of Elizabeth Clare

The diets of bats: Think outside the guild

2024/1/1

High frequency environmental DNA metabarcoding provides rapid and effective monitoring of fish community dynamics

Environmental DNA

2023/11

Air-quality networks collect environmental DNA with the potential to measure biodiversity at continental scales

Current Biology

2023/6/5

Changes in trophic ecology of mobile predators in response to rainforest degradation

Journal of Applied Ecology

2023/6

Out of thin air: surveying tropical bat roosts through air sampling of eDNA

PeerJ

2023/4/26

Answers blowing in the wind: Detection of birds, mammals, and amphibians with airborne environmental DNA in a natural environment over a yearlong survey

Environmental DNA

2023/3

Airborne eDNA documents a diverse and ecologically complex tropical bat and other mammal community

Environmental DNA

2023/3

Detection rates of aphid DNA in the guts of larval hoverflies and potential links to the provision of floral resources

Bulletin of Entomological Research

2022/8

Shunning the scoop: Sidestepping the race to publish

Iscience

2022/4/15

Phylogenetic and ecological trends in specialization: disentangling the drivers of ectoparasite host specificity

BioRxiv

2022/4/7

The structure of tropical bat–plant interaction networks during an extreme El Niño‐Southern Oscillation event

Molecular Ecology

2022/3

Interpretation and application of bat diversity and phylogeny

2022/12/3

Non-target effects of agri-environmental schemes on solitary bees and fungi in the United Kingdom

Bulletin of Entomological Research

2022/12

Cascading effects of habitat loss on ectoparasite-associated bacterial microbiomes

ISME communications

2022/12

Variation in diet of frugivorous bats in fragments of Brazil’s Atlantic Forest associated with vegetation density

Journal of Mammalogy

2022/10/1

Altered structure of bat–prey interaction networks in logged tropical forests revealed by metabarcoding

Molecular Ecology

2021/11

Biodiversity assessment across a dynamic riverine system: A comparison of eDNA metabarcoding versus traditional fish surveying methods

Environmental DNA

2021/11

Selective Logging Shows No Impact on the Dietary Breadth of a Generalist Bat Species: The Fawn Leaf-Nosed Bat (Hipposideros cervinus)

Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution

2021/10/20

See List of Professors in Elizabeth Clare University(Queen Mary University of London)

Co-Authors

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