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Featured researches published by Yawei Wei.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Variation in carbon storage and its distribution by stand age and forest type in boreal and temperate forests in northeastern China.

Yawei Wei; Mai-He Li; Hua Chen; Bernard J. Lewis; Dapao Yu; Li Zhou; Wangming Zhou; Xiangmin Fang; Wei Zhao; Limin Dai

The northeastern forest region of China is an important component of total temperate and boreal forests in the northern hemisphere. But how carbon (C) pool size and distribution varies among tree, understory, forest floor and soil components, and across stand ages remains unclear. To address this knowledge gap, we selected three major temperate and two major boreal forest types in northeastern (NE) China. Within both forest zones, we focused on four stand age classes (young, mid-aged, mature and over-mature). Results showed that total C storage was greater in temperate than in boreal forests, and greater in older than in younger stands. Tree biomass C was the main C component, and its contribution to the total forest C storage increased with increasing stand age. It ranged from 27.7% in young to 62.8% in over-mature stands in boreal forests and from 26.5% in young to 72.8% in over-mature stands in temperate forests. Results from both forest zones thus confirm the large biomass C storage capacity of old-growth forests. Tree biomass C was influenced by forest zone, stand age, and forest type. Soil C contribution to total forest C storage ranged from 62.5% in young to 30.1% in over-mature stands in boreal and from 70.1% in young to 26.0% in over-mature in temperate forests. Thus soil C storage is a major C pool in forests of NE China. On the other hand, understory and forest floor C jointly contained less than 13% and <5%, in boreal and temperate forests respectively, and thus play a minor role in total forest C storage in NE China.


Chinese Geographical Science | 2014

Biomass carbon storage and its sequestration potential of afforestation under natural forest protection program in China

Wangming Zhou; Bernard J. Lewis; Shengnan Wu; Dapao Yu; Li Zhou; Yawei Wei; Limin Dai

Based on the data from China’s Seventh Forest Inventory for the period of 2004–2008, area and stand volume of different types and age-classes of plantation were used to establish the relationship between biomass density and age of planted forests in different regions of the country. Combined with the plantation area in the first-stage of the Natural Forest Protection (NFP) program (1998–2010), this study calculated the biomass carbon storage of the afforestation in the first-stage of the program. On this basis, the carbon sequestration potential of these forests was estimated for the second stage of the program (2011–2020). Biomass carbon storage of plantation established in the first stage of the program was 33.67 Tg C, which was majority accounted by protection forests (30.26 Tg C). There was a significant difference among carbon storage in different regions, which depended on the relationship of biomass carbon density, forest age and plantation area. Under the natural growth, the carbon storage was forecasted to increase annually from 2011 to 2020, reaching 96.03 Tg C at the end of the second-stage of the program in 2020. The annual growth of the carbon storage was forecasted to be 6.24 Tg C/yr, which suggested that NFP program has a significant potential for enhancing carbon sequestration in plantation forests under its domain.


Chinese Geographical Science | 2014

Forest carbon storage and tree carbon pool dynamics under natural forest protection program in northeastern China

Yawei Wei; Dapao Yu; Bernard J. Lewis; Li Zhou; Wangming Zhou; Xiangmin Fang; Wei Zhao; Shengnan Wu; Limin Dai

The Natural Forest Protection (NFP) program is one of the Six Key Forestry Projects which were adopted by the Chinese Government since the 1980s to address important natural issues in China. It advanced to protecting and restoring the structures and functions of the natural forests through sustainable forest management. However, the role of forest carbon storage and tree carbon pool dynamics since the adoption of the NFP remains unknown. To address this knowledge gap, this study calculated forest carbon storage (tree, understory, forest floor and soil) in the forest region of northeastern (NE) China based on National Forest Inventory databases and field investigated databases. For tree biomass, this study utilized an improved method for biomass estimation that converts timber volume to total forest biomass; while for understory, forest floor and soil carbon storage, this study utilized forest type-specific mean carbon densities multiplied by their areas in the region. Results showed that the tree carbon pool under the NFP in NE China functioned as a carbon sink from 1998 to 2008, with an increase of 6.3 Tg C/yr, which was mainly sequestrated by natural forests (5.1 Tg C/yr). At the same time, plantations also acted as a carbon sink, reflecting an increase of 1.2 Tg C/yr. In 2008, total carbon storage in forests covered by the NFP in NE China was 4603.8 Tg C, of which 4393.3 Tg C was stored in natural forests and 210.5 Tg C in planted forests. Soil was the largest carbon storage component, contributing 69.5%–77.8% of total carbon storage; followed by tree and forest floor, accounting for 16.3%–23.0% and 5.0%–6.5% of total carbon storage, respectively. Understory carbon pool ranged from 1.9 to 42.7 Tg C, accounting for only 0.9% of total carbon storage.


Chinese Geographical Science | 2014

Land use effects on soil organic carbon, microbial biomass and microbial activity in Changbai Mountains of Northeast China

Xiangmin Fang; Qingli Wang; Wangming Zhou; Wei Zhao; Yawei Wei; Lijun Niu; Limin Dai

Land use changes are known to alter soil organic carbon (SOC) and microbial properties, however, information about how conversion of natural forest to agricultural land use as well as plantations affects SOC and microbial properties in the Changbai Mountains of Northeast China is meager. Soil carbon content, microbial biomass carbon (MBC), basal respiration and soil carbon mineralization were studied in five selected types of land use: natural old-growth broad-leaved Korean pine mixed forest (NF); spruce plantation (SP) established following clear-cutting of NF; cropland (CL); ginseng farmland (GF) previously under NF; and a five-year Mongolian oak young forest (YF) reforested on an abandoned GF, in the Changbai Mountains of Northeast China in 2011. Results showed that SOC content was significantly lower in SP, CL, GF, and YF than in NF. MBC ranged from 304.4 mg/kg in CL to 1350.3 mg/kg in NF, which was significantly higher in the soil of NF than any soil of the other four land use types. The SOC and MBC contents were higher in SP soil than in CL, GF, and YF soils, yielding a significant difference between SP and CL. The value of basal respiration was also higher in NF than in SP, CL, GF, and YF. Simultaneously, higher values of the metabolic quotient were detected in CL, GF, and YF soils, indicating low substrate utilization of the soil microbial community compared with that in NF and SP soil. The values of cumulative mineralized carbon and potentially mineralized carbon (C0) in NF were significantly higher than those in CL and GF, while no significant difference was observed between NF and SP. In addition, YF had higher values of C0 and C mineralization rate compared with GF. The results indicate that conversion from NF into agricultural land (CL and GF) uses and plantation may lead to a reduction in soil nutrients (SOC and MBC) and substrate utilization efficiency of the microbial community. By contrast, soils below SP were more conducive to the preservation of soil organic matter, which was reflected in the comparison of microbial indicators among CL, GF, and YF land uses. This study can provide data for evaluating soils nutrients under different land use types, and serve as references for the rational land use of natural forest in the study area.


Forest Ecology and Management | 2013

Spatial variation and temporal instability in the climate-growth relationship of Korean pine in the Changbai Mountain region of Northeast China

Dapao Yu; Jiaqing Liu; J Lewis Benard; Li Zhou; Wangming Zhou; Xiangmin Fang; Yawei Wei; Shengwei Jiang; Limin Dai


Annals of Forest Science | 2011

Changes in carbon density for three old-growth forests on Changbai Mountain, Northeast China: 1981–2010

Li Zhou; Limin Dai; Shaoxian Wang; Xiangtong Huang; Xinchuang Wang; Lin Qi; Qingwei Wang; Guowei Li; Yawei Wei; Guofan Shao


The Journal of applied ecology | 2011

Effects of human disturbance on soil aggregates content and their organic C stability in Karst regions

Yawei Wei; Su Yr; Xiangbi Chen; Xingyuan He; Qin Wg; Wei Gf


The Journal of applied ecology | 2004

[Relationships between water and productivity of seabuckthorn (Hippophae) in different habitats of the Loess Plateau, China].

Yawei Wei; Liang Z; Cui L; Han R


The Journal of applied ecology | 2013

Soil organic carbon density and its influencing factors of major forest types in the forest region of Northeast China

Yawei Wei; Dapao Yu; Qing-Jun Wang; Li Zhou; Wangming Zhou; Xiangmin Fang; Xiao-ping Gu; Limin Dai


International Journal on Advances in Information Sciences and Service Sciences | 2012

Evaluation on the Forest Ecosystem Service Function Value

Wei Zhao; Xiangmin Fang; Yawei Wei; Bernard J. Lewis; Limin Dai

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Limin Dai

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Li Zhou

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Wangming Zhou

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Xiangmin Fang

Jiangxi Agricultural University

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Dapao Yu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Bernard J. Lewis

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Wei Zhao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Shengnan Wu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Xiangbi Chen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Xingyuan He

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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