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Hawthorne L. Beyer

Hawthorne L. Beyer

D-Index & Metrics

Ecology and Evolution

D-Index
44
Citations
10650
World Ranking
4981
National Ranking
400

Overview

Hawthorne L. Beyer is a researcher affiliated with the University of Queensland in Australia. Their primary field of study is Environmental Science, with a focus on several subfields including Global and Planetary Change, Ecology, Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law, Economics and Econometrics, and Nature and Landscape Conservation.

Themes central to Beyer's work encompass Conservation, Biodiversity, and Resource Management; Land Use and Ecosystem Services; Forest Management and Policy; Ecology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies; Economic and Environmental Valuation; Coastal and Marine Management; and Marine and Coastal Plant Biology.

Among their recent scientific publications are:

  • Global priority areas for ecosystem restoration (2020, Nature)
  • Anthropogenic modification of forests means only 40% of remaining forests have high ecosystem integrity (2020, Nature Communications)
  • Achieving cost-effective landscape-scale forest restoration through targeted natural regeneration (2020, Conservation Letters)
  • Global rarity of intact coastal regions (2021, Conservation Biology)
  • Global potential for natural regeneration in deforested tropical regions (2024, Nature)

These papers reflect a focus on ecosystem restoration, forest integrity, natural regeneration, and coastal region conservation.

Hawthorne L. Beyer frequently collaborates with other researchers. Their frequent co-authors include James Watson, Renato Crouzeilles, Robin L. Chazdon, Bernardo B. N. Strassburg, and Brooke Williams. The collaboration counts with these co-authors range from 10 to 14 joint works, indicating ongoing research partnerships.

Beyer's work is often published in journals that are well recognized in the environmental and ecological sciences. The frequent publication venues include Nature, Nature Communications, Conservation Biology, Global Change Biology, and bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory).

Best Publications

  • WOLVES INFLUENCE ELK MOVEMENTS: BEHAVIOR SHAPES A TROPHIC CASCADE IN YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK

    Daniel Fortin;Hawthorne L. Beyer;Mark S. Boyce;Douglas W. Smith

  • Global priority areas for ecosystem restoration

    Bernardo B. N. Strassburg;Alvaro Iribarrem;Alvaro Iribarrem;Hawthorne L. Beyer;Carlos Leandro Cordeiro;Carlos Leandro Cordeiro

  • The interpretation of habitat preference metrics under use–availability designs

    Hawthorne L. Beyer;Daniel T. Haydon;Juan M. Morales;Jacqueline L. Frair

  • Removing GPS collar bias in habitat selection studies

    Jacqueline L. Frair;Scott E. Nielsen;Evelyn H. Merrill;Subhash R. Lele

  • Modification of forests by people means only 40% of remaining forests have high ecosystem integrity

    H.S. Grantham;A. Duncan;T. Evans;K.R. Jones

  • Scales of movement by elk (Cervus elaphus) in response to heterogeneity in forage resources and predation risk

    Jacqueline L. Frair;Evelyn H. Merrill;Darcy R. Visscher;Daniel Fortin;Daniel Fortin

  • Group‐size‐mediated habitat selection and group fusion–fission dynamics of bison under predation risk

    Daniel Fortin;Marie-Eve Fortin;Hawthorne L. Beyer;Thierry Duchesne

  • Strategic approaches to restoring ecosystems can triple conservation gains and halve costs

    Bernardo B. N. Strassburg;Bernardo B. N. Strassburg;Bernardo B. N. Strassburg;Hawthorne L. Beyer;Renato Crouzeilles;Renato Crouzeilles;Renato Crouzeilles;Alvaro Iribarrem;Alvaro Iribarrem

  • Range‐wide patterns of greater sage‐grouse persistence

    Cameron L. Aldridge;Scott E. Nielsen;Scott E. Nielsen;Hawthorne L. Beyer;Hawthorne L. Beyer;Mark S. Boyce

  • Towards the implementation of sustainable biofuel production systems

    Diego F. Correa;Hawthorne L. Beyer;Joseph E. Fargione;Jason D. Hill

  • State-space models link elk movement patterns to landscape characteristics in Yellowstone National Park

    James D. Forester;Anthony R. Ives;Monica G. Turner;Dean P. Anderson

  • Risk-sensitive planning for conserving coral reefs under rapid climate change

    Hawthorne L. Beyer;Hawthorne L. Beyer;Emma V. Kennedy;Maria Beger;Maria Beger;Chaolun Allen Chen;Chaolun Allen Chen

  • Securing a Long-term Future for Coral Reefs.

    Ove Hoegh-Guldberg;Emma V. Kennedy;Hawthorne L. Beyer;Caleb McClennen

  • Achieving cost‐effective landscape‐scale forest restoration through targeted natural regeneration

    Renato Crouzeilles;Hawthorne L. Beyer;Hawthorne L. Beyer;Lara M. Monteiro;Rafael Feltran-Barbieri

  • The contribution of predators and scavengers to human well-being

    Christopher J. O’Bryan;Alexander R. Braczkowski;Hawthorne L. Beyer;Neil H. Carter

  • The global rarity of intact coastal regions

    Unknown

  • WILLOW ON YELLOWSTONE'S NORTHERN RANGE: EVIDENCE FOR A TROPHIC CASCADE?

    Hawthorne L. Beyer;Evelyn H. Merrill;Nathan Varley;Mark S. Boyce

  • Biodiversity Risks from Fossil Fuel Extraction

    Nathalie Butt;Hawthorne Beyer;Joseph Bennett;Duan Biggs

  • Thresholds in landscape connectivity and mortality risks in response to growing road networks

    Jacqueline L. Frair;Evelyn H. Merrill;Hawthorne L. Beyer;Juan Manual Morales

  • Solving conservation planning problems with integer linear programming

    Hawthorne L. Beyer;Yann Dujardin;Matthew E. Watts;Hugh P. Possingham

  • SCALE-DEPENDENT SUMMER RESOURCE SELECTION BY REINTRODUCED ELK IN WISCONSIN, USA

    Dean P. Anderson;Monica G. Turner;James D. Forester;Jun Zhu

  • Biodiversity impacts of bioenergy production: Microalgae vs. first generation biofuels

    Diego F. Correa;Hawthorne L. Beyer;Hugh P. Possingham;Skye R. Thomas-Hall

  • Anthropogenic modification of forests means only 40% of remaining forests have high ecosystem integrity

    H. S. Grantham;A. Duncan;T. D. Evans;K. R. Jones

Frequent Co-Authors

Hugh P. Possingham
Hugh P. Possingham University of Queensland
James E. M. Watson
James E. M. Watson University of Queensland
Bernardo B. N. Strassburg
Bernardo B. N. Strassburg International Institute for Sustainability (IIS)
Robin L. Chazdon
Robin L. Chazdon University of Connecticut
Oscar Venter
Oscar Venter University of Northern British Columbia
Hedley S. Grantham
Hedley S. Grantham University of New South Wales
Mark S. Boyce
Mark S. Boyce University of Alberta
Ove Hoegh-Guldberg
Ove Hoegh-Guldberg University of Queensland
Daniel T. Haydon
Daniel T. Haydon University of Glasgow

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