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Featured researches published by Fenghui Yuan.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Spatio-Temporal Analysis of the Accuracy of Tropical Multisatellite Precipitation Analysis 3B42 Precipitation Data in Mid-High Latitudes of China

Yancong Cai; Changjie Jin; Anzhi Wang; Dexin Guan; Jiabing Wu; Fenghui Yuan; Leilei Xu

Satellite-based precipitation data have contributed greatly to quantitatively forecasting precipitation, and provides a potential alternative source for precipitation data allowing researchers to better understand patterns of precipitation over ungauged basins. However, the absence of calibration satellite data creates considerable uncertainties for The Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) Multisatellite Precipitation Analysis (TMPA) 3B42 product over high latitude areas beyond the TRMM satellites latitude band (38°NS). This study attempts to statistically assess TMPA V7 data over the region beyond 40°NS using data obtained from numerous weather stations in 1998–2012. Comparative analysis at three timescales (daily, monthly and annual scale) indicates that adoption of a monthly adjustment significantly improved correlation at a larger timescale increasing from 0.63 to 0.95; TMPA data always exhibits a slight overestimation that is most serious at a daily scale (the absolute bias is 103.54%). Moreover, the performance of TMPA data varies across all seasons. Generally, TMPA data performs best in summer, but worst in winter, which is likely to be associated with the effects of snow/ice-covered surfaces and shortcomings of precipitation retrieval algorithms. Temporal and spatial analysis of accuracy indices suggest that the performance of TMPA data has gradually improved and has benefited from upgrades; the data are more reliable in humid areas than in arid regions. Special attention should be paid to its application in arid areas and in winter with poor scores of accuracy indices. Also, it is clear that the calibration can significantly improve precipitation estimates, the overestimation by TMPA in TRMM-covered area is about a third as much as that in no-TRMM area for monthly and annual precipitation. The systematic evaluation of TMPA over mid-high latitudes provides a broader understanding of satellite-based precipitation estimates, and these data are important for the rational application of TMPA methods in climatic and hydrological research.


Journal of Forestry Research | 2009

Research advances on the biological effects of elevated ultraviolet-B radiation on terrestrial plants

Jiabing Wu; Dexin Guan; Fenghui Yuan; Xinjian Zhang

This review describes the effects of ultraviolet-B (UV-B) radiation on plant growth and development, photosynthesis and photosynthetic pigments and UV-B absorbing compounds. Moreover, plant ecosystem level responses to elevated UV-B radiation and interactions of UV-B radiation with abiotic and biotic factors were also involved. Results collected in this review suggest that approximately two-thirds terrestrial plant species are significantly affected by increase in UV-B radiation. The majority of evidences indicate that elevated UV-B radiation is usually detrimental but there exists tremendous variability in the sensitivity of species to UV-B radiation, and sensitivity also differs among cultivars of the same species.


Science of The Total Environment | 2017

The influence of tree species on small scale spatial heterogeneity of soil respiration in a temperate mixed forest

Weibin Li; Zhen Bai; Changjie Jin; Xinzhong Zhang; Dexin Guan; Anzhi Wang; Fenghui Yuan; Jiabing Wu

Soil respiration is the largest terrestrial carbon flux into the atmosphere, and different tree species could directly influence root derived respiration and indirectly regulate soil respiration rates by altering soil chemical and microbial properties. In this study, we assessed the small scale spatial heterogeneity of soil respiration and the microbial community below the canopy of three dominant tree species (Korean pine (Pinus koraiensis), Mongolian oak (Quercus mongolica), and Manchuria ash (Fraxinus mandshurica)) in a temperate mixed forest in Northeast China. Soil respiration differed significantly during several months and increased in the order of oak<ash<pine, while soil temperature was greater in the order of pine<oak<ash, suggesting that soil respiration variations among tree species were not mainly regulated by soil temperature. In addition, the lower N and higher C concentrations of pine litter resulted in a higher C/N ratio than ash and oak, which might lead to a higher recalcitrance and slower decomposition rate, and decreased heterotrophic respiration under pine. By contrast, fine root biomass was significantly higher under pine than ash and oak, which induced higher soil autotrophic respiration under pine compared to ash and oak. Tree species sharply regulated the bacterial communities through altering the litter and soil properties, while the fungal communities were relatively consistent among tree species. This study revealed the connection between species specific traits and soil respiration, which is crucial for understanding plant-soil feedbacks and improving forecasts of the global carbon cycle.


PLOS ONE | 2015

An Experimental Comparison of Two Methods on Photosynthesis Driving Soil Respiration: Girdling and Defoliation.

Yanli Jing; Dexin Guan; Jiabing Wu; Anzhi Wang; Changjie Jin; Fenghui Yuan

Previous studies with different experimental methods have demonstrated that photosynthesis significantly influences soil respiration (RS). To compare the experimental results of different methods, RS after girdling and defoliation was measured in five-year-old seedlings of Fraxinus mandshurica from June to September. Girdling and defoliation significantly reduced RS by 33% and 25% within 4 days, and 40% and 32% within the entire treatment period, respectively. The differential response of RS to girdling and defoliation was a result of the over-compensation for RS after girdling and redistribution of stored carbon after defoliation. No significant effect on RS was observed between girdling and defoliation treatment, while the soluble sugar content in fine roots was higher in defoliation than in girdling treatment, indicating that defoliation had less compensation effect for RS after interrupting photosynthates supply. We confirm the close coupling of RS with photosynthesis and recommend defoliation for further studies to estimate the effect of photosynthesis on RS.


Science of The Total Environment | 2018

The effects of land use change on soil infiltration capacity in China: A meta-analysis

Di Sun; Yang H; Dexin Guan; Ming Yang; Jiabing Wu; Fenghui Yuan; Changjie Jin; Anzhi Wang; Yushu Zhang

Land use changes are often considered to be the main factors influencing soil infiltration. But the difference of soil infiltration capacity for different land use type is less clear. In this paper, we conduct a meta-analysis of all 42 papers that could be found associated with the effects of land use changes on soil infiltration capacity. The results showed that soil initial and steady infiltration rates increased after land use changes from grassland to forest (+41.35%, /), shrubland to forest (+42.73%, /) and cropland to agroforestry (+70.28%, +84.17%). Soil infiltration rates declined after land use changes from grassland to cropland (/, -45.23%), shrubland to cropland (-64.24%, /) and forest to cropland (-53.58%, -42.15%). It was evident that soil infiltration rates were negatively related to soil bulk density and initial moisture and positively related to soil total porosity and organic matter content. In sum, establishing agroforestry ecosystem was beneficial to improve soil infiltration capacity compare to cropland and plantation, which has important implications for developing sustainable agriculture and forest from the viewpoint of soil and water conservation.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Estimating Daytime Ecosystem Respiration to Improve Estimates of Gross Primary Production of a Temperate Forest

Jinwei Sun; Jiabing Wu; Dexin Guan; Fuqi Yao; Fenghui Yuan; Anzhi Wang; Changjie Jin

Leaf respiration is an important component of carbon exchange in terrestrial ecosystems, and estimates of leaf respiration directly affect the accuracy of ecosystem carbon budgets. Leaf respiration is inhibited by light; therefore, gross primary production (GPP) will be overestimated if the reduction in leaf respiration by light is ignored. However, few studies have quantified GPP overestimation with respect to the degree of light inhibition in forest ecosystems. To determine the effect of light inhibition of leaf respiration on GPP estimation, we assessed the variation in leaf respiration of seedlings of the dominant tree species in an old mixed temperate forest with different photosynthetically active radiation levels using the Laisk method. Canopy respiration was estimated by combining the effect of light inhibition on leaf respiration of these species with within-canopy radiation. Leaf respiration decreased exponentially with an increase in light intensity. Canopy respiration and GPP were overestimated by approximately 20.4% and 4.6%, respectively, when leaf respiration reduction in light was ignored compared with the values obtained when light inhibition of leaf respiration was considered. This study indicates that accurate estimates of daytime ecosystem respiration are needed for the accurate evaluation of carbon budgets in temperate forests. In addition, this study provides a valuable approach to accurately estimate GPP by considering leaf respiration reduction in light in other ecosystems.


Journal of Applied Remote Sensing | 2011

Site-level evaluation of MODIS-based primary production in an old-growth forest in Northeast China

Jiabing Wu; Jinwei Sun; Dexin Guan; Yang H; Guanghua Yin; Anzhi Wang; Fenghui Yuan; Changjie Jin

To improve the accuracy of the moderate resolution imaging spectroradiometer (MODIS) gross primary production (GPP) algorithm, it is critical to evaluate MODIS GPP production for different land cover types using ground-based measurements. In this paper the MODIS primary production products (MOD17) is evaluated by using site-specific input parameters to the algorithm and compared to the results of eddy covariance measurements over an old-growth forest. Direct comparisons suggest that 8-day GPP predicted by the standard MODIS algorithm was highly correlated with flux tower based GPP (r2 = 0.77, P<0.001), while with an average underestimation of 39%. The difference is substantial in magnitude mainly because the inputs of underestimated MODIS biome-specific parameters, maximum light use efficiency εmax and MODIS derived fraction of photosynthetically active radiation. The modified MODIS algorithm GPP calculated with site-specific input parameters compares favorably with ground flux tower observations (r2 = 0.92, relative error = 7%). These results suggest that the MODIS GPP production is most likely underpredicted in forest sites with high primary production, and site-specific input parameters could help to improve the accuracy of MODIS GPP algorithm.


Tree Physiology | 2018

The sweet side of global change–dynamic responses of non-structural carbohydrates to drought, elevated CO2 and nitrogen fertilization in tree species

Weibin Li; Henrik Hartmann; Henry D. Adams; Hongxia Zhang; Changjie Jin; Chuanyan Zhao; Dexin Guan; Anzhi Wang; Fenghui Yuan; Jiabing Wu

Non-structural carbohydrates (NSC) play a central role in plant functioning as energy carriers and building blocks for primary and secondary metabolism. Many studies have investigated how environmental and anthropogenic changes, like increasingly frequent and severe drought episodes, elevated CO2 and atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition, influence NSC concentrations in individual trees. However, this wealth of data has not been analyzed yet to identify general trends using a common statistical framework. A thorough understanding of tree responses to global change is required for making realistic predictions of vegetation dynamics. Here we compiled data from 57 experimental studies on 71 tree species and conducted a meta-analysis to evaluate general responses of stored soluble sugars, starch and total NSC (soluble sugars + starch) concentrations in different tree organs (foliage, above-ground wood and roots) to drought, elevated CO2 and N deposition. We found that drought significantly decreased total NSC in roots (-17.3%), but not in foliage and above-ground woody tissues (bole, branch, stem and/or twig). Elevated CO2 significantly increased total NSC in foliage (+26.2%) and roots (+12.8%), but not in above-ground wood. By contrast, total NSC significantly decreased in roots (-17.9%), increased in above-ground wood (+6.1%), but was unaffected in foliage from N fertilization. In addition, the response of NSC to three global change drivers was strongly affected by tree taxonomic type, leaf habit, tree age and treatment intensity. Our results pave the way for a better understanding of general tree function responses to drought, elevated CO2 and N fertilization. The existing data also reveal that more long-term studies on mature trees that allow testing interactions between these factors are urgently needed to provide a basis for forecasting tree responses to environmental change at the global scale.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2018

Responses of Woody Plant Functional Traits to Nitrogen Addition: A Meta-Analysis of Leaf Economics, Gas Exchange, and Hydraulic Traits

Hongxia Zhang; Weibin Li; Henry D. Adams; Anzhi Wang; Jiabing Wu; Changjie Jin; Dexin Guan; Fenghui Yuan

Atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition has been found to significantly affect plant growth and physiological performance in terrestrial ecosystems. Many individual studies have investigated how N addition influences plant functional traits, however these investigations have usually been limited to a single species, and thereby do not allow derivation of general patterns or underlying mechanisms. We synthesized data from 56 papers and conducted a meta-analysis to assess the general responses of 15 variables related to leaf economics, gas exchange, and hydraulic traits to N addition among 61 woody plant species, primarily from temperate and subtropical regions. Results showed that under N addition, leaf area index (+10.3%), foliar N content (+7.3%), intrinsic water-use efficiency (+3.1%) and net photosynthetic rate (+16.1%) significantly increased, while specific leaf area, stomatal conductance, and transpiration rate did not change. For plant hydraulics, N addition significantly increased vessel diameter (+7.0%), hydraulic conductance in stems/shoots (+6.7%), and water potential corresponding to 50% loss of hydraulic conductivity (P50, +21.5%; i.e., P50 became less negative), while water potential in leaves (−6.7%) decreased (became more negative). N addition had little effect on vessel density, hydraulic conductance in leaves and roots, or water potential in stems/shoots. N addition had greater effects on gymnosperms than angiosperms and ammonium nitrate fertilization had larger effects than fertilization with urea, and high levels of N addition affected more traits than low levels. Our results demonstrate that N addition has coupled effects on both carbon and water dynamics of woody plants. Increased leaf N, likely fixed in photosynthetic enzymes and pigments leads to higher photosynthesis and water use efficiency, which may increase leaf growth, as reflected in LAI results. These changes appear to have downstream effects on hydraulic function through increases in vessel diameter, which leads to higher hydraulic conductance, but lower water potential and increased vulnerability to embolism. Overall, our results suggest that N addition will shift plant function along a tradeoff between C and hydraulic economies by enhancing C uptake while simultaneously increasing the risk of hydraulic dysfunction.


Journal of Hydrology | 2011

Analysis of impacts of climate variability and human activity on streamflow for a river basin in northeast China

Zhang Yf; Dexin Guan; Changjie Jin; Anzhi Wang; Jiabing Wu; Fenghui Yuan

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Dexin Guan

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Anzhi Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Changjie Jin

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Jiabing Wu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Jinwei Sun

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Nina Chen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Yancong Cai

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Di Sun

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Hongxia Zhang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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