Mark Hovenden

Mark Hovenden

University of Tasmania

H-index: 36

Oceania-Australia

About Mark Hovenden

Mark Hovenden, With an exceptional h-index of 36 and a recent h-index of 24 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at University of Tasmania, specializes in the field of plant science, ecology, global change biology.

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

The response of mid-rotation Eucalyptus nitens to nitrogen fertiliser is non-linear and not influenced by phosphorus application

Environmental drivers of increased ecosystem respiration in a warming tundra

Water use and carbon assimilation respond differently to nitrogen supplementation in mid-rotation Eucalyptus nitens

Moister soils at elevated CO2 stimulate root biomass but suppress aboveground biomass production in Lolium perenne

Multifunctional redundancy: Impossible or undetected?

Quantifying neighbour effects on tree growth: Are common ‘competition’indices biased?

The competitive effect of neighbouring plants on the growth of two eucalypts is stronger in dry conditions

The great escape: patterns of enemy release are not explained by time, space or climate

Mark Hovenden Information

University

Position

___

Citations(all)

4763

Citations(since 2020)

2481

Cited By

3086

hIndex(all)

36

hIndex(since 2020)

24

i10Index(all)

68

i10Index(since 2020)

43

Email

University Profile Page

University of Tasmania

Google Scholar

View Google Scholar Profile

Mark Hovenden Skills & Research Interests

plant science

ecology

global change biology

Top articles of Mark Hovenden

Title

Journal

Author(s)

Publication Date

The response of mid-rotation Eucalyptus nitens to nitrogen fertiliser is non-linear and not influenced by phosphorus application

Forest Ecology and Management

RE Brinkhoff

D Mendham

MA Hunt

TG Britton

MJ Hovenden

2024/6/1

Environmental drivers of increased ecosystem respiration in a warming tundra

Nature

SL Maes

J Dietrich

G Midolo

S Schwieger

M Kummu

...

2024/4/17

Water use and carbon assimilation respond differently to nitrogen supplementation in mid-rotation Eucalyptus nitens

Australian Forestry

RE Brinkhoff

D Mendham

MA Hunt

MJ Hovenden

2024/1/15

Moister soils at elevated CO2 stimulate root biomass but suppress aboveground biomass production in Lolium perenne

Crop and Pasture Science

Mark J Hovenden

Amanda L Sinclair

Rose E Brinkhoff

Kate Stevenson

Zachary A Brown

...

2023/8/10

Multifunctional redundancy: Impossible or undetected?

Bridget E White

Mark J Hovenden

Leon A Barmuta

2023/8

Quantifying neighbour effects on tree growth: Are common ‘competition’indices biased?

Journal of Ecology

Travis G Britton

Shane A Richards

Mark J Hovenden

2023/6

The competitive effect of neighbouring plants on the growth of two eucalypts is stronger in dry conditions

Journal of Ecology

Travis G Britton

Shane A Richards

Melissa R Gerwin

Rose E Brinkhoff

Mark J Hovenden

2023/12

The great escape: patterns of enemy release are not explained by time, space or climate

Proceedings of the Royal Society B

Zoe A Xirocostas

Jeff Ollerton

Riin Tamme

Begoña Peco

Vincent Lesieur

...

2023/8/30

Forensic carbon accounting: Assessing the role of seaweeds for carbon sequestration

Journal of Phycology

Catriona L Hurd

Cliff S Law

Lennart T Bach

Damon Britton

Mark Hovenden

...

2022/6

Do trade‐offs govern plant species’ responses to different global change treatments?

J Adam Langley

Emily Grman

Kevin R Wilcox

Meghan L Avolio

Kimberly J Komatsu

...

2022/6

Nitrogen fertiliser only increases leaf area in the lower crown of mid-rotation Eucalyptus nitens plantations

Forest Ecology and Management

Rose Brinkhoff

Daniel Mendham

Mark Hunt

Greg Unwin

Mark Hovenden

2022/3/15

Canopy damage during a natural drought depends on species identity, physiology and stand composition

New Phytologist

Travis G Britton

Timothy J Brodribb

Shane A Richards

Chantelle Ridley

Mark J Hovenden

2022/3

Impacts of Warming on Carbon Fluxes from Individuals to Ecosystems

AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts

Rose Brinkhoff

Aimee Classen

Nathan Sanders

Nicholas G Smith

Lara Souza

...

2022/12

Northumbria Research Link

Abbas Mehrabidavoodabadi

Antti Yla-Jaaski

2021

Integrating natural gradients, experiments, and statistical modeling in a distributed network experiment: An example from the WaRM Network

Ecology and Evolution

Case M Prager

Aimee T Classen

Maja K Sundqvist

Maria Noelia Barrios‐Garcia

Erin K Cameron

...

2022/10

Examining the role of environmental memory in the predictability of carbon and water fluxes across Australian ecosystems

Biogeosciences Discussions

Jon Cranko Page

Martin G De Kauwe

Gab Abramowitz

Jamie Cleverly

Nina Hinko-Najera

...

2021/10/1

Determinants of community compositional change are equally affected by global change

Ecology Letters

Meghan L Avolio

Kimberly J Komatsu

Scott L Collins

Emily Grman

Sally E Koerner

...

2021/9

Aridity drives coordinated trait shifts but not decreased trait variance across the geographic range of eight Australian trees

New Phytologist

Leander DL Anderegg

Xingwen Loy

Ian P Markham

Christina M Elmer

Mark J Hovenden

...

2021/2

Plant communities, populations and individuals have distinct responses to short‐term warming and neighbour biomass removal in two montane grasslands

Applied Vegetation Science

Travis G Britton

Mark J Hovenden

Meagan Porter

Anna Flittner

Rose Brinkhoff

...

2021/1

Nitrogen fertiliser increases LAI but creates carbon and water costs in Eucalyptus nitens

Rose Brinkhoff

Mark Hovenden

Mark Hunt

2020/11/12

See List of Professors in Mark Hovenden University(University of Tasmania)