World's Best Scientists 2026 revealed!

D-Index & Metrics

Ecology and Evolution

D-Index
41
Citations
6730
World Ranking
5834
National Ranking
22

Overview

Enrique J. Chaneton is affiliated with the University of Buenos Aires in Argentina. Their research primarily spans the fields of Environmental Science and Agricultural and Biological Sciences, with a focus on subfields such as Nature and Landscape Conservation, Ecology, Global and Planetary Change, Plant Science, and Soil Science.

The scientist's work encompasses several main topics, including Ecology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies, Soil Carbon and Nitrogen Dynamics, Land Use and Ecosystem Services, Wildlife Ecology and Conservation, Forest Ecology and Biodiversity Studies, Rangeland and Wildlife Management, and Legume Nitrogen Fixing Symbiosis.

Recent papers authored or co-authored by Enrique J. Chaneton include:

  • Negative effects of nitrogen override positive effects of phosphorus on grassland legumes worldwide (2021), Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
  • Environmental heterogeneity modulates the effect of plant diversity on the spatial variability of grassland biomass (2023), Nature Communications
  • Protection offered by leaf fungal endophytes to an invasive species against native herbivores depends on soil nutrients (2020), Journal of Ecology
  • Mowing does not redress the negative effect of nutrient addition on alpha and beta diversity in a temperate grassland (2020), Journal of Ecology
  • Tree invasion in secondary grasslands diminishes herbaceous biomass and diversity: A study of mechanisms behind the process (2021), Journal of Vegetation Science

Frequent co-authors collaborating with Enrique J. Chaneton include:

  • Noemí Mazía
  • Pedro M. Tognetti
  • Anita C. Risch
  • Elizabeth T. Borer
  • Eric W. Seabloom

Their publications have appeared in several recurring academic venues, such as:

  • Journal of Ecology (2 publications)
  • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
  • Nature Communications
  • Journal of Vegetation Science
  • Forest Ecology and Management

Enrique J. Chaneton's research addresses ecological processes within grasslands and forested landscapes, examining factors like nutrient dynamics, plant diversity effects, and invasions by non-native species. This work contributes to the understanding of ecosystem services, biodiversity, and conservation challenges in temperate and global contexts.

Best Publications

  • Addition of multiple limiting resources reduces grassland diversity

    W. Stanley Harpole;W. Stanley Harpole;Lauren L. Sullivan;Eric M. Lind;Jennifer Firn

  • Symbiotic fungal endophytes control insect host–parasite interaction webs

    Marina Omacini;Enrique J. Chaneton;Claudio M. Ghersa;Christine B. Müller;Christine B. Müller

  • Enemy-mediated apparent competition: empirical patterns and the evidence

    Enrique J. Chaneton;Michael B. Bonsall

  • Local loss and spatial homogenization of plant diversity reduce ecosystem multifunctionality

    Yann Hautier;Forest Isbell;Elizabeth T. Borer;Eric W. Seabloom

  • Disturbance effects on plant community diversity: spatial scales and dominance hierarchies

    E. J. Chaneton;J. M. Facelli

  • Change in dominance determines herbivore effects on plant biodiversity

    Sally E. Koerner;Melinda D. Smith;Deron E. Burkepile;Niall P. Hanan

  • Global change effects on plant communities are magnified by time and the number of global change factors imposed

    Kimberly J. Komatsu;Meghan L. Avolio;Nathan P. Lemoine;Forest Isbell

  • Shifts in positive and negative plant interactions along a grazing intensity gradient.

    Pamela Graff;Martín R. Aguiar;Enrique J. Chaneton

  • Variation of grazing-induced vegetation changes across a large-scale productivity gradient

    Felipe Lezama;Santiago Baeza;Alice Altesor;Ariela Cesa

  • Heterotroph species extinction, abundance and biomass dynamics in an experimentally fragmented microecosystem

    Andrew Gonzalez;Enrique J. Chaneton

  • Grazing, Environmental Heterogeneity, and Alien Plant Invasions in Temperate Pampa Grasslands

    Enrique J. Chaneton;Susana B. Perelman;Marina Omacini;Rolando J.C. León

  • Nitrogen and phosphorus cycling in grazed and ungrazed plots in a temperate subhumid grassland in Argentina

    E. J. Chaneton;J. H. Lemcoff;R. S. Lavado

  • Grazing history effects on above- and below-ground litter decomposition and nutrient cycling in two co-occurring grasses

    María Semmartin;Lucas A. Garibaldi;Lucas A. Garibaldi;Enrique J. Chaneton

  • Limits to tree species invasion in pampean grassland and forest plant communities.

    C. Noemi Mazia;Enrique J. Chaneton;Claudio M. Ghersa;Rolando J. C. Leon

  • Landscape complexity differentially affects alpha, beta, and gamma diversities of plants occurring in fencerows and crop fields.

    Santiago L. Poggio;Enrique J. Chaneton;Claudio M. Ghersa

  • Do foliar endophytes affect grass litter decomposition? A microcosm approach using Lolium multiflorum

    Marina Omacini;Enrique J. Chaneton;Claudio M. Ghersa;Pablo Otero

  • Soil nutrients and salinity after long-term grazing exclusion in a Flooding Pampa grassland.

    Enrique J. Chaneton;Raul S. Lavado

  • Exotic vs. native plant dominance over 20 years of old-field succession on set-aside farmland in Argentina

    Pedro M. Tognetti;Enrique J. Chaneton;Marina Omacini;Hernán J. Trebino

  • Small-scale habitat use and assemblage structure of ground-dwelling beetles in a Patagonian shrub steppe

    C. Noemí Mazía;E.J. Chaneton;T. Kitzberger

  • Flooding induces a suite of adaptive plastic responses in the grass Paspalum dilatatum

    P. Insausti;A. A. Grimoldi;E. J. Chaneton;V. Vasellati

Frequent Co-Authors

Thomas Kitzberger
Thomas Kitzberger National University of Comahue
Lucas A. Garibaldi
Lucas A. Garibaldi National Scientific and Technical Research Council
Claudio M. Ghersa
Claudio M. Ghersa University of Buenos Aires
W. Stanley Harpole
W. Stanley Harpole Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research
Jennifer Firn
Jennifer Firn Queensland University of Technology
Eric W. Seabloom
Eric W. Seabloom University of Minnesota
Andrew S. MacDougall
Andrew S. MacDougall University of Guelph
John W. Morgan
John W. Morgan La Trobe University
Kimberly J. La Pierre
Kimberly J. La Pierre Smithsonian Environmental Research Center
Rebecca L. McCulley
Rebecca L. McCulley University of Kentucky

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