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Dive into the research topics where Guibiao Yang is active.

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Featured researches published by Guibiao Yang.


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2016

Linking temperature sensitivity of soil CO2 release to substrate, environmental, and microbial properties across alpine ecosystems

Jinzhi Ding; Leiyi Chen; Beibei Zhang; Li Liu; Guibiao Yang; Kai Fang; Yongliang Chen; Fei Li; Dan Kou; Chengjun Ji; Yiqi Luo; Yuanhe Yang

Our knowledge of fundamental drivers of the temperature sensitivity (Q10) of soil carbon dioxide (CO2) release is crucial for improving the predictability of soil carbon dynamics in Earth System Models. However, patterns and determinants of Q10 over a broad geographic scale are not fully understood, especially in alpine ecosystems. Here, we address this issue by incubating surface soils (0-10 cm) obtained from 156 sites across Tibetan alpine grasslands. Q10 was estimated from the dynamics of the soil CO2 release rate under varying temperatures of 5-25 oC. Structure equation modeling was performed to evaluate the relative importance of substrate, environmental and microbial properties in regulating the soil CO2 release rate and Q10. Our results indicated that steppe soils had significantly lower CO2 release rates but higher Q10 than meadow soils. The combination of substrate properties and environmental variables could predict 52% of the variation in soil CO2 release rate across all grassland sites, and explained 37% and 58% of the variation in Q10 across the steppe and meadow sites, respectively. Of these, precipitation was the best predictor of soil CO2 release rate. Basal microbial respiration rate (B) was the most important predictor of Q10 in steppe soils, whereas soil pH outweighed B as the major regulator in meadow soils. These results demonstrate that carbon quality and environmental variables co-regulate Q10 across alpine ecosystems, implying that modelers can rely on the ‘carbon-quality temperature’ hypothesis for estimating apparent temperature sensitivities, but relevant environmental factors, especially soil pH, should be considered in higher-productivity alpine regions.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2018

Changes in Methane Flux along a Permafrost Thaw Sequence on the Tibetan Plateau

Guibiao Yang; Yunfeng Peng; David Olefeldt; Yongliang Chen; Guanqin Wang; Fei Li; Dianye Zhang; Jun Wang; Jianchun Yu; Li Liu; Shuqi Qin; Tianyang Sun; Yuanhe Yang

Permafrost thaw alters the physical and environmental conditions of soil and may thus cause a positive feedback to climate warming through increased methane emissions. However, the current knowledge of methane emissions following thermokarst development is primarily based on expanding lakes and wetlands, with upland thermokarst being studied less often. In this study, we monitored the methane emissions during the peak growing seasons of two consecutive years along a thaw sequence within a thermo-erosion gully in a Tibetan swamp meadow. Both years had consistent results, with the early and midthaw stages (3 to 12 years since thaw) exhibiting low methane emissions that were similar to those in the undisturbed meadow, while the emissions from the late thaw stage (20 years since thaw) were 3.5 times higher. Our results also showed that the soil water-filled pore space, rather than the soil moisture per se, in combination with the sand content, were the main factors that caused increased methane emissions. These findings differ from the traditional view that upland thermokarst could reduce methane emissions owing to the improvement of drainage conditions, suggesting that upland thermokarst development does not always result in a decrease in methane emissions.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014

Structural evolution of long-duration meteor trail irregularities driven by neutral wind

Guozhu Li; Baiqi Ning; Yen-Hsyang Chu; Iain M. Reid; Lianhuan Hu; B. K. Dolman; Jiangang Xiong; Gouying Jiang; Guibiao Yang; Chunxiao Yan

An experiment on spatial domain interferometry observations of meteor trail irregularities at a low-latitude location in China was conducted during August 2013 using the Sanya VHF coherent radar (18.4 degrees N, 109.6 degrees E). More than 3 thousand range-spread meteor trail echoes (RSTEs) were observed. Among the trail echoes, the spatial structure of meteor trail irregularities responsible for a single long-duration RSTE event persisting for similar to 4min was reconstructed. This RSTE was found to be initially generated at 90-115 km altitudes and aligned along the radar beam boresight. After about the first minute of the trail lifetime, the trail echo appeared only in a narrow altitude range of 94-98 km. An analysis on the spatial pattern of the long-duration RSTE showed that the trail irregularities at lower range gates moved away from the region perpendicular to the geomagnetic field. The eastward drifts of the RSTE irregularities were found to decrease with increasing altitude, e.g., from 80 ms(-1) at similar to 94 km to 20 ms(-1) at similar to 100 km. Simultaneous horizontal neutral wind measurements made with the Fuke all-skymeteor radar (located north of Sanya) recorded a similar velocity profile. We suggest that the neutral wind could drive the spatial structural evolution of the RSTE irregularities, and help to determine the altitudes where the longest portion of the RSTE was located.


Molecular Ecology | 2017

Distinct microbial communities in the active and permafrost layers on the Tibetan Plateau

Yongliang Chen; Ye Deng; Jinzhi Ding; Hang-Wei Hu; Tian-Le Xu; Fei Li; Guibiao Yang; Yuanhe Yang

Permafrost represents an important understudied genetic resource. Soil microorganisms play important roles in regulating biogeochemical cycles and maintaining ecosystem function. However, our knowledge of patterns and drivers of permafrost microbial communities is limited over broad geographic scales. Using high‐throughput Illumina sequencing, this study compared soil bacterial, archaeal and fungal communities between the active and permafrost layers on the Tibetan Plateau. Our results indicated that microbial alpha diversity was significantly higher in the active layer than in the permafrost layer with the exception of fungal Shannon–Wiener index and Simpsons diversity index, and microbial community structures were significantly different between the two layers. Our results also revealed that environmental factors such as soil fertility (soil organic carbon, dissolved organic carbon and total nitrogen contents) were the primary drivers of the beta diversity of bacterial, archaeal and fungal communities in the active layer. In contrast, environmental variables such as the mean annual precipitation and total phosphorus played dominant roles in driving the microbial beta diversity in the permafrost layer. Spatial distance was important for predicting the bacterial and archaeal beta diversity in both the active and permafrost layers, but not for fungal communities. Collectively, these results demonstrated different driving factors of microbial beta diversity between the active layer and permafrost layer, implying that the drivers of the microbial beta diversity observed in the active layer cannot be used to predict the biogeographic patterns of the microbial beta diversity in the permafrost layer.


Ecology | 2017

Warming effects on permafrost ecosystem carbon fluxes associated with plant nutrients

Fei Li; Yunfeng Peng; Susan M. Natali; Kelong Chen; Tianfeng Han; Guibiao Yang; Jinzhi Ding; Dianye Zhang; Guanqin Wang; Jun Wang; Jianchun Yu; Futing Liu; Yuanhe Yang

Large uncertainties exist in carbon (C)-climate feedback in permafrost regions, partly due to an insufficient understanding of warming effects on nutrient availabilities and their subsequent impacts on vegetation C sequestration. Although a warming climate may promote a substantial release of soil C to the atmosphere, a warming-induced increase in soil nutrient availability may enhance plant productivity, thus offsetting C loss from microbial respiration. Here, we present evidence that the positive temperature effect on carbon dioxide (CO2 ) fluxes may be weakened by reduced plant nitrogen (N) and phosphorous (P) concentrations in a Tibetan permafrost ecosystem. Although experimental warming initially enhanced ecosystem CO2 uptake, the increased rate disappeared after the period of peak plant growth during the early growing season, even though soil moisture was not a limiting factor in this swamp meadow ecosystem. We observed that warming did not significantly affect soil extractable N or P during the period of peak growth, but decreased both N and P concentrations in the leaves of dominant plant species, likely caused by accelerated plant senescence in the warmed plots. The attenuated warming effect on CO2 assimilation during the late growing season was associated with lowered leaf N and P concentrations. These findings suggest that warming-mediated nutrient changes may not always benefit ecosystem C uptake in permafrost regions, making our ability to predict the C balance in these warming-sensitive ecosystems more challenging than previously thought.


Science of The Total Environment | 2019

Spatially-explicit estimate of soil nitrogen stock and its implication for land model across Tibetan alpine permafrost region

Dan Kou; Jinzhi Ding; Fei Li; Ning Wei; Kai Fang; Guibiao Yang; Beibei Zhang; Li Liu; Shuqi Qin; Yongliang Chen; Jianyang Xia; Yuanhe Yang

Permafrost soils store a large amount of nitrogen (N) which could be activated under the continuous climate warming. However, compared with carbon (C) stock, little is known about the size and spatial distribution of permafrost N stock. By combining measurements from 519 pedons with two machine learning models (supporting vector machine (SVM) and random forest (RF)), we estimated the size and spatial distribution of N stock across the Tibetan alpine permafrost region. We then compared these spatially-explicit N estimates with simulated N stocks from the Community Land Model (CLM). We found that N density (N amount per area) in the top three meters was 1.58 kg N m-2 (interquartile range: 1.40-1.76) across the study area, constituting a total of 1802 Tg N (interquartile range: 1605-2008), decreasing from the southeast to the northwest of the plateau. N stored below 1 m accounted for 48% of the total N stock in the top three meters. CLM4.5 significantly underestimated the N stock on the Tibetan Plateau, primarily in areas with arid/semi-arid climate. The process of biological N fixation played a key role in the underestimation of N stock prediction. Overall, our study highlights that it is imperative to improve the simulation of N processes and permafrost N stocks in land models to better predict ecological consequences induced by rapid and widespread permafrost degradation.


Nature Communications | 2018

Nitrogen availability regulates topsoil carbon dynamics after permafrost thaw by altering microbial metabolic efficiency

Leiyi Chen; Li Liu; Chao Mao; Shuqi Qin; Jun Wang; Futing Liu; Sergey Blagodatsky; Guibiao Yang; Qiwen Zhang; Dianye Zhang; Jianchun Yu; Yuanhe Yang

Input of labile carbon may accelerate the decomposition of existing soil organic matter (priming effect), with the priming intensity depending on changes in soil nitrogen availability after permafrost thaw. However, experimental evidence for the linkage between the priming effect and post-thaw nitrogen availability is unavailable. Here we test the hypothesis that elevated nitrogen availability after permafrost collapse inhibits the priming effect by increasing microbial metabolic efficiency based on a combination of thermokarst-induced natural nitrogen gradient and nitrogen addition experiment. We find a negative correlation between the priming intensity and soil total dissolved nitrogen concentration along the thaw sequence. The negative effect is confirmed by the reduced priming effect after nitrogen addition. In contrast to the prevailing view, this nitrogen-regulated priming intensity is independent of extracellular enzyme activities but associated with microbial metabolic efficiency. These findings demonstrate that post-thaw nitrogen availability regulates topsoil carbon dynamics through its modification of microbial metabolic efficiency.Soil nitrogen availability may alter carbon dynamics after permafrost thaw, but experimental evidence for this carbon-nitrogen interaction is still lacking. Here the authors show that elevated post-thaw nitrogen availability inhibits soil carbon release through its enhancement in microbial metabolic efficiency.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2018

Magnitude and Pathways of Increased Nitrous Oxide Emissions from Uplands Following Permafrost Thaw

Guibiao Yang; Yunfeng Peng; Maija E. Marushchak; Yongliang Chen; Guanqin Wang; Fei Li; Dianye Zhang; Jun Wang; Jianchun Yu; Li Liu; Shuqi Qin; Dan Kou; Yuanhe Yang

Permafrost thawing may release nitrous oxide (N2O) due to large N storage in cold environments. However, N2O emissions from permafrost regions have received little attention to date, particularly with respect to the underlying microbial mechanisms. We examined the magnitude of N2O fluxes following upland thermokarst formation along a 20-year thaw sequence within a thermo-erosion gully in a Tibetan swamp meadow. We also determined the importance of environmental factors and the related microbial functional gene abundance. Our results showed that permafrost thawing led to a mass release of N2O in recently collapsed sites (3 years ago), particularly in exposed soil patches, which presented post-thaw emission rates equivalent to those from agricultural and tropical soils. In addition to abiotic factors, soil microorganisms exerted significant effects on the variability in the N2O emissions along the thaw sequence and between vegetated and exposed patches. Overall, our results demonstrate that upland thermokarst formation can lead to enhanced N2O emissions, and that the global warming potential (GWP) of N2O at the thermokarst sites can reach 60% of the GWP of CH4 (vs ∼6% in control sites), highlighting the potentially strong noncarbon (C) feedback to climate warming in permafrost regions.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

Decreased soil cation exchange capacity across northern China's grasslands over the last three decades

Kai Fang; Dan Kou; Guanqin Wang; Leiyi Chen; Jinzhi Ding; Fei Li; Guibiao Yang; Shuqi Qin; Li Liu; Qiwen Zhang; Yuanhe Yang

Cation exchange capacity (CEC) helps soils hold nutrients and buffer pH, making it vital for maintaining basic function of terrestrial ecosystems. However, little is known about the temporal dynamics of CEC over broad geographical scales. In this study, we used Random Forest method to compare historical CEC data from the 1980s with new data from the 2010s across northern Chinas grasslands. We found that topsoil CEC in the 2010s was significantly lower than in the 1980s, with an overall decline of about 14%. Topsoil CEC decreased significantly in alpine meadow, alpine steppe, meadow steppe, and typical steppe by 11%, 20%, 27% and 9% respectively. Desert steppe was the only ecosystem type which experienced no significant change. CEC was positively related to soil carbon content, silt content, and mean annual precipitation, suggesting that the decline was potentially associated with soil organic carbon loss, soil degradation, soil acidification, and extreme precipitation across northern Chinas grasslands since the 1980s. Overall, our results demonstrate topsoil CEC loss due to environmental changes, which may alter the vegetation community composition and its productivity and thus trigger grassland dynamics under a changing environment.


Global Change Biology | 2016

The permafrost carbon inventory on the Tibetan Plateau: a new evaluation using deep sediment cores

Jinzhi Ding; Fei Li; Guibiao Yang; Leiyi Chen; Beibei Zhang; Li Liu; Kai Fang; Shuqi Qin; Yongliang Chen; Yunfeng Peng; Chengjun Ji; Honglin He; Pete Smith; Yuanhe Yang

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Yuanhe Yang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Fei Li

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Kai Fang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Li Liu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Jinzhi Ding

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Shuqi Qin

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Yunfeng Peng

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Yongliang Chen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Dan Kou

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Guanqin Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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