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Ian D. Hodkinson
Researcher at Liverpool John Moores University
Publications - 66
Citations - 6744
Ian D. Hodkinson is an academic researcher from Liverpool John Moores University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Arctic. The author has an hindex of 37, co-authored 66 publications receiving 6142 citations.
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Herbivory in global climate change research: direct effects of rising temperature on insect herbivores
J. S. Bale,Gregory J. Masters,Ian D. Hodkinson,Caroline S. Awmack,T. Martijn Bezemer,Valerie K. Brown,Jennifer Butterfield,Alan Buse,John C. Coulson,John Farrar,John E. G. Good,Richard Harrington,Susane Hartley,T. Hefin Jones,Richard L. Lindroth,Malcolm C. Press,Ilias Symrnioudis,Allan D. Watt,J. B. Whittaker +18 more
TL;DR: Future research needs to consider insect herbivore phenotypic and genotypic flexibility, their responses to global change parameters operating in concert, and awareness that some patterns may only become apparent in the longer term.
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Terrestrial insects along elevation gradients: species and community responses to altitude
TL;DR: This review seeks to synthesise information on the responses of insects and allied groups to increasing altitude and provide a platform for future research by considering how montane insect species will respond to climate warming.
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Terrestrial and Aquatic Invertebrates as Bioindicators for Environmental Monitoring, with Particular Reference to Mountain Ecosystems
Ian D. Hodkinson,John K. Jackson +1 more
TL;DR: The use of terrestrial and aquatic invertebrates as a management tool for monitoring change in ecosystems is reviewed and critically evaluated and their suitability and value for assessing a range of environmental problems from pollution impacts to habitat evaluation.
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Life cycle variation and adaptation in jumping plant lice (Insecta: Hemiptera: Psylloidea): a global synthesis
TL;DR: While a phylogenetic signal can be identified within the data, the main drivers for life history adaptation are environmental temperatures and water availability, acting directly on the psyllids or mediated through their host plants.
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Community assembly along proglacial chronosequences in the high Arctic: vegetation and soil development in north‐west Svalbard
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors described community assembly for two contrasting high Arctic chronosequences representing glacial regression of up to 2000 years on Svalbard, showing that the earliest colonizers were often species with ectomycorrhizal associations, followed by mid-successional species that tended to disappear as ground cover increased.