“…He made it clear to his readers that both understocking and overstocking could result in the degrading of otherwise highly productive agricultural land, even on nutrient-poor soils on difficult terrains (Lemaire et al, 2011). John's contribution to finding this sweet spot was a series of papers that measured the selection and consumption of various species of pasture grass (Garay et al, 1997;da Silva et al, 2009), legume (Poli, Hodgson, Cosgrove, & Arnold, 2006) and forage crops (Li, Kemp, & Hodgson, 1997), and in particular mixtures of these species (Illius et al, 1992;Milne, Hodgson, Thompson, Souter, & Barthram, 1982), by various grazing livestock species including sheep (Milne et al, 1982), cattle (Griffiths, Hodgson, & Arnold, 2003a,b;Poli et al, 2006;Romera, Morris, Hodgson, Stirling, & Wodward, 2004), red and sambar deer (Semiadi, Muir, Barry, Veltman, & Hodgson, 1993), goats (Harrington, Beskow, & Hodgson, 2011) and alpaca (Sharp, Knight, & Hodgson, 1995). John also provided the primary research techniques that allow the precise measurement of growth, palatability and senescence in pasture plants (Hodgson & Ollerenshaw, 1969).…”