Mark Bertness

Mark Bertness

Brown University

H-index: 99

North America-United States

About Mark Bertness

Mark Bertness, With an exceptional h-index of 99 and a recent h-index of 50 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at Brown University, specializes in the field of wetland ecology, Community Ecology, intertidal ecology, marine conservation, marine ecology.

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

Where consumers control plant reproduction in coastal wetlands: The environmental stress model in plants' versus consumers' perspectives

Dead foundation species drive ecosystem dynamics

Top-down control of macrofauna: Are waterbirds passengers or drivers in wetlands?

Shorebirds-driven trophic cascade helps restore coastal wetland multifunctionality

Long-distance facilitation of coastal ecosystem structure and resilience

An invasive species erodes the performance of coastal wetland protected areas

Sea-level rise and the emergence of a keystone grazer alter the geomorphic evolution and ecology of southeast US salt marshes

A brief natural history of civilization: Why a balance between cooperation & competition is vital to humanity

Mark Bertness Information

University

Position

___

Citations(all)

42757

Citations(since 2020)

11292

Cited By

36044

hIndex(all)

99

hIndex(since 2020)

50

i10Index(all)

188

i10Index(since 2020)

160

Email

University Profile Page

Brown University

Google Scholar

View Google Scholar Profile

Mark Bertness Skills & Research Interests

wetland ecology

Community Ecology

intertidal ecology

marine conservation

marine ecology

Top articles of Mark Bertness

Title

Journal

Author(s)

Publication Date

Where consumers control plant reproduction in coastal wetlands: The environmental stress model in plants' versus consumers' perspectives

Journal of Ecology

Changlin Xu

Junlin Ren

Hanchen Wang

Mark D Bertness

Jihua Wu

...

2024/1/5

Dead foundation species drive ecosystem dynamics

Patrick H Saldaña

Christine Angelini

Mark D Bertness

Andrew H Altieri

2023/11/1

Top-down control of macrofauna: Are waterbirds passengers or drivers in wetlands?

Biological Conservation

Jianshe Chen

Chunming Li

Changlu Wu

Xuena Sun

Xuesong Feng

...

2023/3/1

Shorebirds-driven trophic cascade helps restore coastal wetland multifunctionality

Nature Communications

Chunming Li

Jianshe Chen

Xiaolin Liao

Aaron P Ramus

Christine Angelini

...

2023/12/6

Long-distance facilitation of coastal ecosystem structure and resilience

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Bo Wang

Kang Zhang

Quan-Xing Liu

Qiang He

Johan van de Koppel

...

2022/7/12

An invasive species erodes the performance of coastal wetland protected areas

Science advances

Junlin Ren

Jianshe Chen

Changlin Xu

Johan van de Koppel

Mads S Thomsen

...

2021/10/15

Sea-level rise and the emergence of a keystone grazer alter the geomorphic evolution and ecology of southeast US salt marshes

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Sinéad M Crotty

Collin Ortals

Thomas M Pettengill

Luming Shi

Maitane Olabarrieta

...

2020/7/28

A brief natural history of civilization: Why a balance between cooperation & competition is vital to humanity

Mark Bertness

2020/4/14

Consumer regulation of the carbon cycle in coastal wetland ecosystems

Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B

Qiang He

Haoran Li

Changlin Xu

Qingyan Sun

Mark D Bertness

...

2020/12/21

See List of Professors in Mark Bertness University(Brown University)

Co-Authors

H-index: 106
Steven Gaines

Steven Gaines

University of California, Santa Barbara

H-index: 97
Mark E Hay

Mark E Hay

Georgia Institute of Technology

H-index: 91
Aaron M. Ellison

Aaron M. Ellison

Harvard University

H-index: 75
Brian R. Silliman

Brian R. Silliman

Duke University

H-index: 73
John Bruno

John Bruno

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

H-index: 67
Jonathan Levine

Jonathan Levine

Princeton University

academic-engine