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Ecology and Evolution

D-Index
40
Citations
6074
World Ranking
6138
National Ranking
72

Overview

Ian D. Hogg is affiliated with the University of Waikato in New Zealand and specializes in environmental science, with a research focus on ecology. Their work spans several subfields including ecology, atmospheric science, molecular biology, genetics, and the intersection of evolution, behavior, and systematics.

The main topics covered by their research include polar research and ecology, microbial community ecology and physiology, environmental DNA in biodiversity studies, geology and paleoclimatology research, protist diversity and phylogeny, isotope analysis in ecology, and species distribution related to climate change.

The scientist has contributed to numerous publications in well-recognized venues such as bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Polar Biology, Research Square (Research Square), Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, and Biological Reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society. These venues represent a range of formats from preprints to peer-reviewed journal articles.

Recent papers authored or co-authored by Ian D. Hogg include the following:

  • Multiple energy sources and metabolic strategies sustain microbial diversity in Antarctic desert soils, 2021, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
  • Antarctic ecosystems in transition - life between stresses and opportunities, 2020, Biological reviews/Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society
  • Groundwater is a hidden global keystone ecosystem, 2023, Global Change Biology
  • Exploring the Boundaries of Microbial Habitability in Soil, 2021, Journal of Geophysical Research Biogeosciences
  • A DNA Barcoding Survey of an Arctic Arthropod Community: Implications for Future Monitoring, 2020, Insects

Collaboration is a significant aspect of their research with frequent co-authors including Byron J. Adams, Diana H. Wall, Don A. Cowan, W. Berry Lyons, and Noah Fierer. These collaborations suggest interdisciplinary work across microbial ecology, polar biology, and environmental studies.

Best Publications

  • Biological identification of springtails (Hexapoda: Collembola) from the Canadian Arctic, using mitochondrial DNA barcodes

    Ian D Hogg;Paul D.N Hebert

  • Diversity and distribution of Victoria Land biota

    Byron J. Adams;Richard D. Bardgett;Edward Ayres;Diana H. Wall

  • Response of Stream Invertebrates to a Global‐Warming Thermal Regime: An Ecosystem‐Level Manipulation

    Ian D. Hogg;Ian D. Hogg;D. Dudley Williams

  • Biotic interactions in Antarctic terrestrial ecosystems: are they a factor?

    Ian D. Hogg;S. Craig Cary;Pete Convey;Kevin K. Newsham

  • Towards robust and repeatable sampling methods in eDNA-based studies

    Ian A. Dickie;Ian A. Dickie;Stephane Boyer;Stephane Boyer;Hannah L. Buckley;Richard P. Duncan

  • Southern Hemisphere Springtails: Could Any Have Survived Glaciation of Antarctica?

    Mark Ian Stevens;Penelope Greenslade;Ian D Hogg;Paul James Sunnucks

  • Long-term isolation and recent range expansion from glacial refugia revealed for the endemic springtail Gomphiocephalus hodgsoni from Victoria Land, Antarctica

    Mark I. Stevens;Ian D. Hogg

  • Environmental drivers of viral community composition in Antarctic soils identified by viromics

    Evelien M. Adriaenssens;Evelien M. Adriaenssens;Rolf Kramer;Marc W. Van Goethem;Thulani P. Makhalanyane

  • Multiple energy sources and metabolic strategies sustain microbial diversity in Antarctic desert soils.

    Maximiliano Ortiz;Pok Man Leung;Guy Shelley;Thanavit Jirapanjawat

  • A review of potential methods for zooplankton control in wastewater treatment High Rate Algal Ponds and algal production raceways

    Valerio Montemezzani;Ian C. Duggan;Ian D. Hogg;Rupert J. Craggs

  • Phylogeography of New Zealand's coastal benthos

    Philip M. Ross;Ian D. Hogg;Conrad A. Pilditch;Carolyn J. Lundquist

  • Biodiversity inventories in high gear: DNA barcoding facilitates a rapid biotic survey of a temperate nature reserve

    Angela C Telfer;Monica R Young;Jenna Quinn;Kate Perez

  • Antarctic ecosystems in transition – life between stresses and opportunities

    Julian Gutt;Enrique Isla;José C. Xavier;José C. Xavier;Byron J. Adams

  • The Trichoptera barcode initiative: a strategy for generating a species-level Tree of Life.

    Xin Zhou;Paul B. Frandsen;Ralph W. Holzenthal;Clare R. Beet

  • Effects of runoff from land clearing and urban development on the distribution and abundance of macroinvertebrates in pool areas of a river

    ID Hogg;RH Norris

  • Contrasting phylogeographical patterns for springtails reflect different evolutionary histories between the Antarctic Peninsula and continental Antarctica.

    Angela McGaughran;Giulia Torricelli;Giulia Torricelli;Antonio Carapelli;Francesco Frati

  • The phylogeography of Adelie penguin faecal flora.

    Jonathan C. Banks;S. Craig Cary;Ian D. Hogg

  • Contrasting levels of mitochondrial DNA variability between mites (Penthalodidae) and springtails (Hypogastruridae) from the Trans-Antarctic Mountains suggest long-term effects of glaciation and life history on substitution rates, and speciation processes

    Mark Ian Stevens;Ian D Hogg

  • High diversity of lichens at 84°S, Queen Maud Mountains, suggests preglacial survival of species in the Ross Sea region, Antarctica

    T. G. A. Green;T. G. A. Green;L. G. Sancho;R. Türk;R. D. Seppelt

  • Population genetic structure of New Zealand's endemic corophiid amphipods: evidence for allopatric speciation

    Mark I. Stevens;Ian D. Hogg

Frequent Co-Authors

Paul D. N. Hebert
Paul D. N. Hebert University of Guelph
Dirk Steinke
Dirk Steinke University of Guelph
Thibaud Decaëns
Thibaud Decaëns University of Montpellier
Marko Mutanen
Marko Mutanen University of Oulu
Tomas Roslin
Tomas Roslin Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Scott E. Miller
Scott E. Miller National Museum of Natural History
Byron J. Adams
Byron J. Adams Brigham Young University
Diana H. Wall
Diana H. Wall Colorado State University
Mark I. Stevens
Mark I. Stevens South Australian Museum
Don A. Cowan
Don A. Cowan University of Pretoria

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