Scott Bennett

Scott Bennett

University of Tasmania

H-index: 21

Oceania-Australia

About Scott Bennett

Scott Bennett, With an exceptional h-index of 21 and a recent h-index of 20 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at University of Tasmania, specializes in the field of marine ecology, climate change, coastal ecosystems, Great Southern Reef.

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

Tropicalization shifts herbivore pressure from seagrass to rocky reef communities

The Kelp Forest Challenge: A collaborative global movement to protect and restore 4 million hectares of kelp forests

A functional perspective on the meaning of the term ‘herbivore’: patterns versus processes in coral reef fishes

From Tasmania to the world: long and strong traditions in seaweed use, research, and development

Seagrass Thermal Limits and Vulnerability to Future Warming

Persistent thermally‐driven shift in the functional trait structure of herbivorous fishes: evidence of top‐down control on the rebound potential of temperate seaweed forests?

Thermal performance of seaweeds and seagrasses across a regional climate gradient

Resilience of seagrass populations to thermal stress does not reflect regional differences in ocean climate

Scott Bennett Information

University

Position

ARC DECRA Fellow Institute of Marine and Antarctic Studies

Citations(all)

4592

Citations(since 2020)

3327

Cited By

2534

hIndex(all)

21

hIndex(since 2020)

20

i10Index(all)

32

i10Index(since 2020)

29

Email

University Profile Page

University of Tasmania

Google Scholar

View Google Scholar Profile

Scott Bennett Skills & Research Interests

marine ecology

climate change

coastal ecosystems

Great Southern Reef

Top articles of Scott Bennett

Title

Journal

Author(s)

Publication Date

Tropicalization shifts herbivore pressure from seagrass to rocky reef communities

Proceedings of the Royal Society B

Julia Santana-Garcon

Scott Bennett

Núria Marbà

Adriana Vergés

Rohan Arthur

...

2023/1/11

The Kelp Forest Challenge: A collaborative global movement to protect and restore 4 million hectares of kelp forests

Aaron Matthius Eger

J David Aguirre

María Altamirano

Nur Arafeh-Dalmau

Nina Larissa Arroyo

...

2023/10/9

A functional perspective on the meaning of the term ‘herbivore’: patterns versus processes in coral reef fishes

Coral Reefs

Sterling B Tebbett

Scott Bennett

David R Bellwood

2023/4/3

From Tasmania to the world: long and strong traditions in seaweed use, research, and development

Catriona L Hurd

Jeffrey T Wright

Cayne Layton

Elisabeth MA Strain

Damon Britton

...

2023/2/23

Seagrass Thermal Limits and Vulnerability to Future Warming

Frontiers in Marine Science

Núria Marbà

Gabriel Jordà

Scott Bennett

Carlos M Duarte

2022/5/27

Persistent thermally‐driven shift in the functional trait structure of herbivorous fishes: evidence of top‐down control on the rebound potential of temperate seaweed forests?

Global Change Biology

Nestor E Bosch

Matthew McLean

Salvador Zarco‐Perello

Scott Bennett

Rick D Stuart‐Smith

...

2022/1/3

Thermal performance of seaweeds and seagrasses across a regional climate gradient

Frontiers in Marine Science

Scott Bennett

Nuria Marba

Gabriel Jorda

Raquel Vaquer-Sunyer

Marina Forteza

...

2022

Resilience of seagrass populations to thermal stress does not reflect regional differences in ocean climate

New Phytologist

Scott Bennett

Teresa Alcoverro

Demetris Kletou

Charalampos Antoniou

Jordi Boada

...

2022

Successful establishment of range-shifting, warm-water Labridae in temperate South Western Australia

Marine Ecology Progress Series

Jack RC Parker

Benjamin J Saunders

Scott Bennett

Euan S Harvey

2021/6/10

Climate-driven impacts of exotic species on marine ecosystems

Scott Bennett

Julia Santana Garçon

Núria Marbà

Gabriel Jordá

Andrea Anton

...

2020/3/4

Persistence of tropical herbivores in temperate reefs constrain kelp resilience to cryptic habitats

Journal of Ecology

S Zarco‐Perello

NE Bosch

S Bennett

MA Vanderklift

T Wernberg

2021

Ecological effects of non‐native species in marine ecosystems relate to co‐occurring anthropogenic pressures

Global change biology

Nathan R Geraldi

Andrea Anton

Julia Santana‐Garcon

Scott Bennett

Nuria Marbà

...

2020/3

Reply to: Indiscriminate data aggregation in ecological meta-analysis underestimates impacts of invasive species

Nature Ecology & Evolution

Andrea Anton

Nathan R Geraldi

Catherine E Lovelock

Eugenia T Apostolaki

Scott Bennett

...

2020/3

Ocean warming compresses the three-dimensional habitat of marine life

Nature Ecology & Evolution

Gabriel Jorda

Núria Marbà

Scott Bennett

Julia Santana-Garcon

Susana Agusti

...

2020/1

See List of Professors in Scott Bennett University(University of Tasmania)

Co-Authors

H-index: 177
Carlos M. Duarte

Carlos M. Duarte

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

H-index: 72
Euan Harvey

Euan Harvey

Curtin University

H-index: 56
Mads Solgaard Thomsen

Mads Solgaard Thomsen

University of Canterbury

H-index: 19
Benjamin John Saunders

Benjamin John Saunders

Curtin University

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