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Featured researches published by Wenhong Mo.


Ecological Research | 2000

Winter CO2 flux from soil and snow surfaces in a cool‐temperate deciduous forest, Japan

Shigeru Mariko; Noboru Nishimura; Wenhong Mo; Yoshisuke Matsui; Takeshi Kibe; Hiroshi Koizumi

We measured diurnal and wintertime changes in CO2 fluxes from soil and snow surfaces in a Japanese cool-temperate Quercus/Betula forest between December 1994 and May 1995. To evaluate the relationship between these winter fluxes and temperature, flux measurements were made with the open-flow infrared gas analyzer (IRGA) method rather than with the more commonly used closed chamber method or the snow CO2 profile method. The open-flow IRGA method proved to be more successful in measurements of winter CO2 fluxes than the two standard methods. Despite colder air temperatures, soil temperature profiles were greater than 0°C because of the thermal insulation effect of deep snowpack. This reveals that soil temperature is satisfactory for microbial respiration throughout the winter. Unfrozen soils under the snowpack showed neither diurnal nor wintertime trends in CO2 fluxes or in soil surface temperature, although there was a daily snow surface CO2 flux of 0.18–0.32 g m−2. By combining this with other reference data, Japanese cool-temperate forest soils in snowy regions can be estimated to emit < 100 g m−2 carbon over an entire winter, and this value accounts for < 15% of the annual emission. In the present study, when data for all winter fluxes were taken together, fluxes were most highly correlated with deep soil temperatures rather than the soil surface temperature. Such a high correlation can be attributed to the relatively increased respiration of the deep soil where the temperature was higher than the soil surface temperature. Thus, deeper soil temperature is a better predictor of winter CO2 fluxes in cold and snowy ecosystems.


Ecosystems | 2006

Carbon Dioxide Dynamics and Controls in a Deep-water Wetland on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau

Mitsuru Hirota; Yanhong Tang; Qiwu Hu; Shigeki Hirata; Tomomichi Kato; Wenhong Mo; Guangmin Cao; Shigeru Mariko

To initially characterize the dynamics and environmental controls of CO2, ecosystem CO2 fluxes were measured for different vegetation zones in a deep-water wetland on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau during the growing season of 2002. Four zones of vegetation along a gradient from shallow to deep water were dominated, respectively by the emergent species Carex allivescens V. Krez., Scirpus distigmaticus L., Hippuris vulgaris L., and the submerged species Potamogeton pectinatus L. Gross primary production (GPP), ecosystem respiration (Re), and net ecosystem production (NEP) were markedly different among the vegetation zones, with lower Re and GPP in deeper water. NEP was highest in the Scirpus-dominated zone with moderate water depth, but lowest in the Potamogeton-zone that occupied approximately 75% of the total wetland area. Diurnal variation in CO2 flux was highly correlated with variation in light intensity and soil temperature. The relationship between CO2 flux and these environmental variables varied among the vegetation zones. Seasonal CO2 fluxes, including GPP, Re, and NEP, were strongly correlated with aboveground biomass, which was in turn determined by water depth. In the early growing season, temperature sensitivity (Q10) for Re varied from 6.0 to 8.9 depending on vegetation zone. Q10 decreased in the late growing season. Estimated NEP for the whole deep-water wetland over the growing season was 24 g C m−2. Our results suggest that water depth is the major environmental control of seasonal variation in CO2 flux, whereas photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) controls diurnal dynamics.


Limnology | 2007

Net primary productivity and spatial distribution of vegetation in an alpine wetland, Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau

Mitsuru Hirota; Kiyokazu Kawada; Qiwu Hu; Tomomichi Kato; Yanhong Tang; Wenhong Mo; Guangmin Cao; Shigeru Mariko

To initially describe vegetation structure and spatial variation in plant biomass in a typical alpine wetland of the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau, net primary productivity and vegetation in relationship to environmental factors were investigated. In 2002, the wetland remained flooded to an average water depth of 25 cm during the growing season, from July to mid-September. We mapped the floodline and vegetation distribution using GPS (global positioning system). Coverage of vegetation in the wetland was 100%, and the vegetation was zonally distributed along a water depth gradient, with three emergent plant zones (Hippuris vulgaris-dominated zone, Scirpus distigmaticus-dominated zone, and Carex allivescers-dominated zone) and one submerged plant zone (Potamogeton pectinatus-dominated zone). Both aboveground and belowground biomass varied temporally within and among the vegetation zones. Further, net primary productivity (NPP) as estimated by peak biomass also differed among the vegetation zones; aboveground NPP was highest in the Carex-dominated zone with shallowest water and lowest in the Potamogeton zone with deepest water. The area occupied by each zone was 73.5% for P. pectinatus, 2.6% for H. vulgaris, 20.5% for S. distigmaticus, and 3.4% for C. allivescers. Morphological features in relationship to gas-transport efficiency of the aerial part differed among the emergent plants. Of the three emergent plants, H. vulgaris, which dominated in the deeper water, showed greater morphological adaptability to deep water than the other two emergent plants.


Soil Biology & Biochemistry | 2004

Grazing intensity alters soil respiration in an alpine meadow on the Tibetan plateau

Guangmin Cao; Yanhong Tang; Wenhong Mo; Yuesi Wang; Yingnian Li; Xingquan Zhao


Agricultural and Forest Meteorology | 2005

Seasonal and annual variations in soil respiration in a cool-temperate deciduous broad-leaved forest in japan

Wenhong Mo; Mi Sun Lee; Masaki Uchida; Motoko Inatomi; Nobuko Saigusa; Shigeru Mariko; Hiroshi Koizumi


Soil Biology & Biochemistry | 2004

Methane emissions from different vegetation zones in a Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau wetland

Mitsuru Hirota; Yanhong Tang; Qiwu Hu; Shigeki Hirata; Tomomichi Kato; Wenhong Mo; Guangmin Cao; Shigeru Mariko


Agricultural and Forest Meteorology | 2005

Biometric based estimates of net primary production (NPP) in a cool-temperate deciduous forest stand beneath a flux tower

Toshiyuki Ohtsuka; Tsuyoshi Akiyama; Yasushi Hashimoto; Motoko Inatomi; Toru Sakai; Shugang Jia; Wenhong Mo; Satoshi Tsuda; Hiroshi Koizumi


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2005

Biomass carbon accumulation by Japan's forests from 1947 to 1995

Jingyun Fang; Takehisa Oikawa; Tomomichi Kato; Wenhong Mo; Zhiheng Wang


Ecosystems | 2007

Biometric Based Carbon Flux Measurements and Net Ecosystem Production (NEP) in a Temperate Deciduous Broad-Leaved Forest Beneath a Flux Tower

Toshiyuki Ohtsuka; Wenhong Mo; Takami Satomura; Motoko Inatomi; Hiroshi Koizumi


Atmospheric Environment | 2005

The potential importance of grazing to the fluxes of carbon dioxide and methane in an alpine wetland on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau

Mitsuru Hirota; Yanhong Tang; Qiwu Hu; Tomomichi Kato; Shigeki Hirata; Wenhong Mo; Guangmin Cao; Shigeru Mariko

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Tomomichi Kato

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Yanhong Tang

National Institute for Environmental Studies

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Guangmin Cao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Qiwu Hu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Masaki Uchida

National Institute of Polar Research

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