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H-Index Ranking - Agricultural And Biological Sciences

Are you looking for the H-Index Journals Ranking? You are in the right place.

The H-Index is a metric that captures both the productivity and citation impact of a journal’s publications. A journal with an H-Index of h means it has at least h articles each cited at least h times.

Below you will find the most recent list of journals sorted by H-Index value, alongside their SJR Score and Quartile classification.



# Journals List H-Index SJR Score Quartile
1 Trends in Ecology and Evolution 370 5.127 Q1
2 Ecology Letters 298 4.426 Q1
3 Trends in Plant Science 293 3.213 Q1
4 Current Opinion in Plant Biology 223 3.206 Q1
5 Annual Review of Entomology 217 5.655 Q1
6 Nature Plants 111 5.205 Q1
7 Journal of Food Science and Technology 94 0.666
8 Crop Journal 46 1.209 Q1
9 Journal of Forestry Research 40 0.601 Q1
10 Nature Food 40 3.525 Q1
11 Sugar Tech 36 0.358 Q2
12 Indian Journal of Natural Products and Resources 36 0.191 Q4
13 Mycosphere 34 3.918 Q1
14 Indian Journal of Agricultural Sciences 30 0.177 Q4
15 Indian Journal of Agronomy 25 0.205 Q3
16 Scientia Agricultura Sinica 21 0.256 Q3
17 Asian Herpetological Research 19 0.609 Q1
18 Acta Pedologica Sinica 18 0.313 Q3
19 Legume Research 18 0.391 Q2
20 Research on Crops 17 0.216 Q3
21 Journal of Agrometeorology 14 0.253 Q3
22 Rheedea 14 0.279 Q3
23 Vegetos 14 0.268 Q3
24 Indian Journal of Horticulture 14 0.191 Q4
25 Journal of the Indian Society of Soil Science 14 0.308 Q3
26 Electronic Journal of Plant Breeding 13 0.249 Q3
27 Acta Horticulturae Sinica 13 0.233 Q3
28 Range Management and Agroforestry 12 0.266 Q3
29 Indian Journal of Agricultural Research 12m 0.293 Q2
30 Chinese Journal of Rice Science 11 0.251 Q3
31 Journal of Forestry Engineering 10 0.428 Q2
32 Zoological Systematics 6 0.454 Q2

What is the H-Index?

The H-Index (or Hirsch Index) is a metric that captures both the productivity and the citation impact of a publication. A journal (or author) has an H-Index of h if it has published at least h papers, each of which has been cited at least h times. So a journal with an H-Index of 50 has published at least 50 papers, each cited at least 50 times.

How is the H-Index Calculated?

  1. List all papers published by the journal, sorted by citation count (highest first).
  2. Walk down the list. The H-Index is the largest position n where the n-th paper has at least n citations.
  3. Example: a journal has 5 papers with citation counts {12, 8, 5, 3, 1}. The H-Index is 3 — because the 3rd paper has 5 citations (≥3), but the 4th paper has only 3 citations (=3, qualifies but the 5th has 1, breaking the chain).

The H-Index can never decrease over time — only grow as more citations accumulate. Unlike Impact Factor, it’s not affected by a single “blockbuster” paper that gets thousands of citations.

H-Index vs Impact Factor vs SJR

MetricWhat It MeasuresTime WindowStrength
H-IndexProductivity + sustained impactLifetimeResists outliers
Impact FactorAverage citations per paper2 yearsRecent activity
SJRPrestige-weighted citations3 yearsQuality signal

Why the H-Index Matters

  • Long-term reputation: H-Index reflects sustained influence, not one-off bursts.
  • Hard to game: A journal can’t artificially boost its H-Index by publishing one viral paper.
  • Cross-database: Available from Scopus, Web of Science and Google Scholar (each gives slightly different numbers).
  • Used for evaluation: Many funding agencies use H-Index alongside other metrics.

H-Index FAQ

What is a good H-Index for a journal?

It varies by field. In medicine, a strong journal often has H-Index > 100. In niche subfields, H-Index > 30 is excellent. Always compare within the same subject area using our H-Index Ranking.

Why are H-Index values different in Scopus vs Google Scholar?

Each database has its own citation index. Google Scholar typically gives a higher H-Index because it indexes more sources (including books, theses, gray literature). Scopus and WOS are stricter and considered more rigorous.

Can the H-Index decrease?

No — the H-Index can only stay the same or grow as new citations come in.

How can I find high-H-Index journals in my field?

Use our Advanced Journal Finder sorted by H-Index, or browse our H-Index Ranking by subject.

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