World's Best Scientists 2026 revealed!

D-Index & Metrics

Ecology and Evolution

D-Index
76
Citations
20613
World Ranking
1000
National Ranking
83

Overview

Jason Beringer is affiliated with the University of Western Australia in Australia. Their research focuses on environmental science, particularly examining interactions between the atmosphere and terrestrial ecosystems. Their work spans multiple subfields including global and planetary change, atmospheric science, environmental engineering, water science and technology, and ecology.

Beringer's main research topics include plant water relations and carbon dynamics, climate variability and models, hydrology and watershed management studies, meteorological phenomena and simulations, atmospheric and environmental gas dynamics, urban heat island mitigation, and species distribution in relation to climate change.

The scientist has contributed to the following publications:

  • The FLUXNET2015 dataset and the ONEFlux processing pipeline for eddy covariance data, 2020, Scientific Data
  • Termite sensitivity to temperature affects global wood decay rates, 2022, Science
  • Author Correction: The FLUXNET2015 dataset and the ONEFlux processing pipeline for eddy covariance data, 2021, Scientific Data
  • Inferring CO2 fertilization effect based on global monitoring land-atmosphere exchange with a theoretical model, 2020, Environmental Research Letters
  • Bridge to the future: Important lessons from 20 years of ecosystem observations made by the OzFlux network, 2022, Global Change Biology

Frequent co-authors collaborating with Beringer include:

  • James Cleverly
  • Lindsay B. Hutley
  • Stefan K. Arndt
  • Dennis Baldocchi
  • Richard Silberstein

Major publication venues where Beringer's work appears regularly are:

  • Global Change Biology
  • Environmental Research Letters
  • Agricultural and Forest Meteorology
  • Scientific Data
  • Remote Sensing of Environment

Best Publications

  • Role of Land-Surface Changes in Arctic Summer Warming

    F. S. Chapin;M. Sturm;Mark C. Serreze;J.P. McFadden

  • The FLUXNET2015 dataset and the ONEFlux processing pipeline for eddy covariance data

    Gilberto Pastorello;Carlo Trotta;Eleonora Canfora;Housen Chu

  • Watering our cities The capacity for Water Sensitive Urban Design to support urban cooling and improve human thermal comfort in the Australian context

    Andrew McDonald Coutts;Nigel James Tapper;Jason Beringer;Margaret Elizabeth Loughnan

  • Integration of MODIS land and atmosphere products with a coupled-process model to estimate gross primary productivity and evapotranspiration from 1 km to global scales

    Youngryel Ryu;Youngryel Ryu;Dennis D. Baldocchi;Hideki Kobayashi;Catharine van Ingen

  • Initial results from Phase 2 of the international urban energy balance model comparison

    C.S.B. Grimmond;M. Blackett;M.J. Best;J.J. Baik

  • Solar‐induced chlorophyll fluorescence is strongly correlated with terrestrial photosynthesis for a wide variety of biomes: First global analysis based on OCO‐2 and flux tower observations

    Xing Li;Xing Li;Jingfeng Xiao;Binbin He;M. Altaf Arain

  • Temperature and human thermal comfort effects of street trees across three contrasting street canyon environments

    Andrew M. Coutts;Emma C. White;Nigel J. Tapper;Jason Beringer

  • Impact of Increasing Urban Density on Local Climate: Spatial and Temporal Variations in the Surface Energy Balance in Melbourne, Australia

    Andrew McDonald Coutts;Jason Beringer;Nigel James Tapper

  • Quantifying the influence of local meteorology on air quality using generalized additive models

    John L. Pearce;Jason Beringer;Neville Nicholls;Rob J. Hyndman

  • Global comparison of light use efficiency models for simulating terrestrial vegetation gross primary production based on the LaThuile database

    Wenping Yuan;Wenwen Cai;Jiangzhou Xia;Jiquan Chen

  • Means and extremes: building variability into community-level climate change experiments.

    Ross Thompson;Ross Thompson;John Beardall;Jason Beringer;Michael Raymond Grace

  • Scaling of potential evapotranspiration with MODIS data reproduces flux observations and catchment water balance observations across Australia

    Juan Pablo Guerschman;Albert I.J.M. Van Dijk;Guillaume Mattersdorf;Jason Beringer

  • Recent increases in terrestrial carbon uptake at little cost to the water cycle

    Lei Cheng;Lu Zhang;Ying Ping Wang;Josep Gili Canadell

  • Assessing practical measures to reduce urban heat: Green and cool roofs

    Andrew McDonald Coutts;Edoardo Daly;Jason Beringer;Nigel James Tapper

  • The representation of arctic soils in the land surface model: The importance of mosses

    Jason Beringer;Amanda H. Lynch;F. Stuart Chapin;Michelle Mack

  • Surface energy exchanges along a tundra-forest transition and feedbacks to climate

    Jason Beringer;F. Stuart Chapin;Catharine C. Thompson;A. David McGuire

  • Savanna fires and their impact on net ecosystem productivity in North Australia

    Jason Beringer;Lindsay B. Hutley;Nigel J. Tapper;Lucas A. Cernusak

  • Spatial patterns and temporal dynamics in savanna vegetation phenology across the North Australian Tropical Transect

    Xuanlong Ma;Xuanlong Ma;Alfredo R Huete;Qiang Qiang Yu;Natalia Restrepo Coupe

  • An introduction to the Australian and New Zealand flux tower network - OzFlux

    Jason Beringer;Lindsay B Hutley;Ian McHugh;Stefan K Arndt

  • Characteristics influencing the variability of urban CO2 fluxes in Melbourne, Australia

    Andrew McDonald Coutts;Jason Beringer;Nigel James Tapper

  • An optimality-based model of the dynamic feedbacks between natural vegetation and the water balance

    Stanislaus J Schymanski;Stanislaus J Schymanski;Murugesu Sivapalan;Murugesu Sivapalan;Michael Roderick;Lindsay Beaumont Hutley

  • Savanna fires and their impact on Net ecosystem productivity

    Jason Beringer;Lindsay Beaumont Hutley;N. J. Tapper

Frequent Co-Authors

Lindsay B. Hutley
Lindsay B. Hutley Charles Darwin University
Nigel J. Tapper
Nigel J. Tapper Monash University
James Cleverly
James Cleverly James Cook University
Derek Eamus
Derek Eamus University of Technology Sydney
Stefan K. Arndt
Stefan K. Arndt University of Melbourne
Eva van Gorsel
Eva van Gorsel Australian National University
Alfredo Huete
Alfredo Huete University of Technology Sydney
Stephen J. Livesley
Stephen J. Livesley University of Melbourne
Ray Leuning
Ray Leuning CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research
Amanda H. Lynch
Amanda H. Lynch Brown University

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