Chris Johnson: h-index, Total Citations, and Citation Map
Chris Johnson's h-index is 76 (244 i10-index, 22,868+ total citations across 328+ publications) according to Google Scholar as of June 2026. Chris Johnson is affiliated with Professor of Wildlife Conservation, University of Tasmania.
Chris Johnson is a researcher affiliated with Professor of Wildlife Conservation, University of Tasmania, specializing in Conservation biology, Ecology. Their work has been cited 22,868 times. This profile visualizes their global influence, highlighting strong citation networks in Germany.
Chris Johnson's Citation Metrics
Bibliometric impact based on 328 indexed publications.
- H-Index
- 76
- i10-Index
- 244
- Total Citations
- 22,868
- Citing Countries
- 6
As of June 2026.
Chris Johnson has an h-index of 76 and 22,868 total citations across 328 publications, with research cited by institutions in 6 countries.
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We've mapped 5,000 of 22,868 citations for Chris Johnson
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Predator interactions, mesopredator release and biodiversity conservation
20091,829
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Visa Evidence Package
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Citation trend (last 10 years)Click to expand
Citation Trend (Last 10 Years)
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About Chris Johnson's research
Chris Johnson is a researcher in Conservation biology and Ecology at Professor of Wildlife Conservation, University of Tasmania. Their work has been cited 22,868 times across 328 publications (h-index 76), according to Google Scholar.
Their most-cited work, “Predator interactions, mesopredator release and biodiversity conservation” (2009), has accumulated 1,829 citations. Other influential works include “Biodiversity losses and conservation responses in the Anthropocene” (2017) with 1,312 citations and “Australia's mammal extinctions: a 50,000-year history” (2006) with 731 citations.
Citations of Chris Johnson's research come primarily from Germany, Netherlands and New Zealand, reflecting international research impact across 5+ countries. The interactive citation map above shows the full geographic distribution of the institutions citing this work.











