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Centre pour l’étude et la simulation du climat à l’échelle régionale (ESCER)
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Centre pour l’étude et la simulation du climat à l’échelle régionale (ESCER)
  • Bibliography
  1. Vitrine des bibliographies
  2. Centre pour l’étude et la simulation du climat à l’échelle régionale (ESCER)
  3. Résultats
Centre pour l’étude et la simulation du climat à l’échelle régionale (ESCER)Centre pour l’étude et la simulation du climat à l’échelle régionale (ESCER)
  • Bibliography

Votre recherche

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L’interface de recherche est composée de trois sections : Rechercher, Explorer et Résultats. Celles-ci sont décrites en détail ci-dessous.

Vous pouvez lancer une recherche aussi bien à partir de la section Rechercher qu’à partir de la section Explorer.

Rechercher

Cette section affiche vos critères de recherche courants et vous permet de soumettre des mots-clés à chercher dans la bibliographie.

  • Chaque nouvelle soumission ajoute les mots-clés saisis à la liste des critères de recherche.
  • Pour lancer une nouvelle recherche plutôt qu’ajouter des mots-clés à la recherche courante, utilisez le bouton Réinitialiser la recherche, puis entrez vos mots-clés.
  • Pour remplacer un mot-clé déjà soumis, veuillez d’abord le retirer en décochant sa case à cocher, puis soumettre un nouveau mot-clé.
  • Vous pouvez contrôler la portée de votre recherche en choisissant où chercher. Les options sont :
    • Partout : repère vos mots-clés dans tous les champs des références bibliographiques ainsi que dans le contenu textuel des documents disponibles.
    • Dans les auteurs ou contributeurs : repère vos mots-clés dans les noms d’auteurs ou de contributeurs.
    • Dans les titres : repère vos mots-clés dans les titres.
    • Dans les années de publication : repère vos mots-clés dans le champ d’année de publication (vous pouvez utiliser l’opérateur OU avec vos mots-clés pour trouver des références ayant différentes années de publication. Par exemple, 2020 OU 2021).
    • Dans tous les champs : repère vos mots-clés dans tous les champs des notices bibliographiques.
    • Dans les documents : repère vos mots-clés dans le contenu textuel des documents disponibles.
  • Vous pouvez utiliser les opérateurs booléens avec vos mots-clés :
    • ET : repère les références qui contiennent tous les termes fournis. Ceci est la relation par défaut entre les termes séparés d’un espace. Par exemple, a b est équivalent à a ET b.
    • OU : repère les références qui contiennent n’importe lequel des termes fournis. Par exemple, a OU b.
    • SAUF : exclut les références qui contiennent le terme fourni. Par exemple, SAUF a.
    • Les opérateurs booléens doivent être saisis en MAJUSCULES.
  • Vous pouvez faire des groupements logiques (avec les parenthèses) pour éviter les ambiguïtés lors de la combinaison de plusieurs opérateurs booléens. Par exemple, (a OU b) ET c.
  • Vous pouvez demander une séquence exacte de mots (avec les guillemets droits), par exemple "a b c". Par défaut la différence entre les positions des mots est de 1, ce qui signifie qu’une référence sera repérée si elle contient les mots et qu’ils sont consécutifs. Une distance maximale différente peut être fournie (avec le tilde), par exemple "a b"~2 permet jusqu’à un terme entre a et b, ce qui signifie que la séquence a c b pourrait être repérée aussi bien que a b.
  • Vous pouvez préciser que certains termes sont plus importants que d’autres (avec l’accent circonflexe). Par exemple, a^2 b c^0.5 indique que a est deux fois plus important que b dans le calcul de pertinence des résultats, tandis que c est de moitié moins important. Ce type de facteur peut être appliqué à un groupement logique, par exemple (a b)^3 c.
  • La recherche par mots-clés est insensible à la casse et les accents et la ponctuation sont ignorés.
  • Les terminaisons des mots sont amputées pour la plupart des champs, tels le titre, le résumé et les notes. L’amputation des terminaisons vous évite d’avoir à prévoir toutes les formes possibles d’un mot dans vos recherches. Ainsi, les termes municipal, municipale et municipaux, par exemple, donneront tous le même résultat. L’amputation des terminaisons n’est pas appliquée au texte des champs de noms, tels auteurs/contributeurs, éditeur, publication.

Explorer

Cette section vous permet d’explorer les catégories associées aux références.

  • Les catégories peuvent servir à affiner votre recherche. Cochez une catégorie pour l’ajouter à vos critères de recherche. Les résultats seront alors restreints aux références qui sont associées à cette catégorie.
  • Dé-cochez une catégorie pour la retirer de vos critères de recherche et élargir votre recherche.
  • Les nombres affichés à côté des catégories indiquent combien de références sont associées à chaque catégorie considérant les résultats de recherche courants. Ces nombres varieront en fonction de vos critères de recherche, de manière à toujours décrire le jeu de résultats courant. De même, des catégories et des facettes entières pourront disparaître lorsque les résultats de recherche ne contiennent aucune référence leur étant associées.
  • Une icône de flèche () apparaissant à côté d’une catégorie indique que des sous-catégories sont disponibles. Vous pouvez appuyer sur l’icône pour faire afficher la liste de ces catégories plus spécifiques. Par la suite, vous pouvez appuyer à nouveau pour masquer la liste. L’action d’afficher ou de masquer les sous-catégories ne modifie pas vos critères de recherche; ceci vous permet de rapidement explorer l’arborescence des catégories, si désiré.

Résultats

Cette section présente les résultats de recherche. Si aucun critère de recherche n’a été fourni, elle montre toute la bibliographie (jusqu’à 20 références par page).

  • Chaque référence de la liste des résultats est un hyperlien vers sa notice bibliographique complète. À partir de la notice, vous pouvez continuer à explorer les résultats de recherche en naviguant vers les notices précédentes ou suivantes de vos résultats de recherche, ou encore retourner à la liste des résultats.
  • Des hyperliens supplémentaires, tels que Consulter le document ou Consulter sur [nom d’un site web], peuvent apparaître sous un résultat de recherche. Ces liens vous fournissent un accès rapide à la ressource, des liens que vous trouverez également dans la notice bibliographique.
  • Le bouton Résumés vous permet d’activer ou de désactiver l’affichage des résumés dans la liste des résultats de recherche. Toutefois, activer l’affichage des résumés n’aura aucun effet sur les résultats pour lesquels aucun résumé n’est disponible.
  • Diverses options sont fournies pour permettre de contrôler l’ordonnancement les résultats de recherche. L’une d’elles est l’option de tri par Pertinence, qui classe les résultats du plus pertinent au moins pertinent. Le score utilisé à cette fin prend en compte la fréquence des mots ainsi que les champs dans lesquels ils apparaissent. Par exemple, si un terme recherché apparaît fréquemment dans une référence ou est l’un d’un très petit nombre de termes utilisé dans cette référence, cette référence aura probablement un score plus élevé qu’une autre où le terme apparaît moins fréquemment ou qui contient un très grand nombre de mots. De même, le score sera plus élevé si un terme est rare dans l’ensemble de la bibliographie que s’il est très commun. De plus, si un terme de recherche apparaît par exemple dans le titre d’une référence, le score de cette référence sera plus élevé que s’il apparaissait dans un champ moins important tel le résumé.
  • Le tri par Pertinence n’est disponible qu’après avoir soumis des mots-clés par le biais de la section Rechercher.
  • Les catégories sélectionnées dans la section Explorer n’ont aucun effet sur le tri par pertinence. Elles ne font que filtrer la liste des résultats.
Langue de la ressource
  • Anglais

Résultats 786 ressources

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Résumés
  • Deng, L., Peng, C., Zhu, G., Chen, L., Liu, Y., & Shangguan, Z. (2018). Positive responses of belowground C dynamics to nitrogen enrichment in China. Science of The Total Environment, 616–617, 1035–1044. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.10.215
    Consulter sur linkinghub.elsevier.com
  • Guo, Y., Peng, C., Trancoso, R., Zhu, Q., & Zhou, X. (2019). Stand carbon density drivers and changes under future climate scenarios across global forests. Forest Ecology and Management, 449, 117463. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2019.117463
    Consulter sur linkinghub.elsevier.com
  • Shi, S., Yang, M., Hou, Y., Peng, C., Wu, H., Zhu, Q., Liang, Q., Xie, J., & Wang, M. (2019). Simulation of dissolved organic carbon concentrations and fluxes in Chinese monsoon forest ecosystems using a modified TRIPLEX-DOC model. Science of The Total Environment, 697, 134054. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.134054
    Consulter sur linkinghub.elsevier.com
  • Zhou, X., Lei, X., Liu, C., Huang, H., Zhou, C., & Peng, C. (2019). Re-estimating the changes and ranges of forest biomass carbon in China during the past 40 years. Forest Ecosystems, 6(1), 51. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40663-019-0208-9

    Abstract Background In recent decades the future of global forests has been a matter of increasing concern, particularly in relation to the threat of forest ecosystem responses under potential climate change. To the future predictions of these responses, the current forest biomass carbon storage (FCS) should first be clarified as much as possible, especially at national scales. However, few studies have introduced how to verify an FCS estimate by delimiting the reasonable ranges. This paper addresses an estimation of national FCS and its verification using two-step process to narrow the uncertainty. Our study focuses on a methodology for reducing the uncertainty resulted by converting from growing stock volume to above- and below-ground biomass (AB biomass), so as to eliminate the significant bias in national scale estimations. Methods We recommend splitting the estimation into two parts, one part for stem and the other part for AB biomass to preclude possible significant bias. Our method estimates the stem biomass from volume and wood density (WD), and converts the AB biomass from stem biomass by using allometric relationships. Results Based on the presented two-step process, the estimation of China’s FCS is performed as an example to explicate how to infer the ranges of national FCS. The experimental results demonstrate a national FCS estimation within the reasonable ranges (relative errors: + 4.46% and − 4.44%), e.g., 5.6–6.1 PgC for China’s forest ecosystem at the beginning of the 2010s. These ranges are less than 0.52 PgC for confirming each FCS estimate of different periods during the last 40 years. In addition, our results suggest the upper-limits by specifying a highly impractical value of WD (0.7 t∙m − 3 ) on the national scale. As a control reference, this value decides what estimate is impossible to achieve for the FCS estimates. Conclusions Presented methodological analysis highlights the possibility to determine a range that the true value could be located in. The two-step process will help to verify national FCS and also to reduce uncertainty in related studies. While the true value of national FCS is immeasurable, our work should motivate future studies that explore new estimations to approach the true value by narrowing the uncertainty in FCS estimations on national and global scales.

    Consulter le document
  • He, Y., Guan, W., Xue, D., Liu, L., Peng, C., Liao, B., Hu, J., Zhu, Q., Yang, Y., Wang, X., Zhou, G., Wu, Z., & Chen, H. (2019). Comparison of methane emissions among invasive and native mangrove species in Dongzhaigang, Hainan Island. Science of The Total Environment, 697, 133945. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.133945
    Consulter sur linkinghub.elsevier.com
  • Wu, X., Guo, W., Liu, H., Li, X., Peng, C., Allen, C. D., Zhang, C., Wang, P., Pei, T., Ma, Y., Tian, Y., Song, Z., Zhu, W., Wang, Y., Li, Z., & Chen, D. (2019). Exposures to temperature beyond threshold disproportionately reduce vegetation growth in the northern hemisphere. National Science Review, 6(4), 786–795. https://doi.org/10.1093/nsr/nwy158

    Abstract In recent decades, terrestrial vegetation in the northern hemisphere (NH) has been exposed to warming and more extremely high temperatures. However, the consequences of these changes for terrestrial vegetation growth remain poorly quantified and understood. By examining a satellite-based vegetation index, tree-ring measurements and land-surface model simulations, we discovered a consistent convex pattern in the responses of vegetation growth to temperature exposure (TE) for forest, shrub and grass in both the temperate (30°−50° N) and boreal (50°−70° N) NH during the period of 1982−2012. The response of vegetation growth to TE for the three vegetation types in both the temperate and boreal NH increased convergently with increasing temperature, until vegetation type-dependent temperature thresholds were reached. A TE beyond these temperature thresholds resulted in disproportionately weak positive or even strong negative responses. Vegetation growth in the boreal NH was more vulnerable to extremely high-temperature events than vegetation growth in the temporal NH. The non-linear responses discovered here provide new insights into the dynamics of northern terrestrial ecosystems in a warmer world.

    Consulter le document
  • El Masri, B., Schwalm, C., Huntzinger, D. N., Mao, J., Shi, X., Peng, C., Fisher, J. B., Jain, A. K., Tian, H., Poulter, B., & Michalak, A. M. (2019). Carbon and Water Use Efficiencies: A Comparative Analysis of Ten Terrestrial Ecosystem Models under Changing Climate. Scientific Reports, 9(1), 14680. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-50808-7

    Abstract Terrestrial ecosystems carbon and water cycles are tightly coupled through photosynthesis and evapotranspiration processes. The ratios of carbon stored to carbon uptake and water loss to carbon gain are key ecophysiological indicators essential to assess the magnitude and response of the terrestrial plant to the changing climate. Here, we use estimates from 10 terrestrial ecosystem models to quantify the impacts of climate, atmospheric CO 2 concentration, and nitrogen (N) deposition on water use efficiency (WUE), and carbon use efficiency (CUE). We find that across models, WUE increases over the 20 th Century particularly due to CO 2 fertilization and N deposition and compares favorably to experimental studies. Also, the results show a decrease in WUE with climate for the last 3 decades, in contrasts with up-scaled flux observations that demonstrate a constant WUE. Modeled WUE responds minimally to climate with modeled CUE exhibiting no clear trend across space and time. The divergence between simulated and observationally-constrained WUE and CUE is driven by modeled NPP and autotrophic respiration, nitrogen cycle, carbon allocation, and soil moisture dynamics in current ecosystem models. We suggest that carbon-modeling community needs to reexamine stomatal conductance schemes and the soil-vegetation interactions for more robust modeling of carbon and water cycles.

    Consulter le document
  • Liu, Y., Piao, S., Gasser, T., Ciais, P., Yang, H., Wang, H., Keenan, T. F., Huang, M., Wan, S., Song, J., Wang, K., Janssens, I. A., Peñuelas, J., Huntingford, C., Wang, X., Altaf Arain, M., Fang, Y., Fisher, J. B., Huang, M., … Wang, T. (2019). Field-experiment constraints on the enhancement of the terrestrial carbon sink by CO2 fertilization. Nature Geoscience, 12(10), 809–814. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-019-0436-1
    Consulter le document
  • Yu, K., Smith, W. K., Trugman, A. T., Condit, R., Hubbell, S. P., Sardans, J., Peng, C., Zhu, K., Peñuelas, J., Cailleret, M., Levanic, T., Gessler, A., Schaub, M., Ferretti, M., & Anderegg, W. R. L. (2019). Pervasive decreases in living vegetation carbon turnover time across forest climate zones. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 116(49), 24662–24667. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1821387116

    Forests play a major role in the global carbon cycle. Previous studies on the capacity of forests to sequester atmospheric CO 2 have mostly focused on carbon uptake, but the roles of carbon turnover time and its spatiotemporal changes remain poorly understood. Here, we used long-term inventory data (1955 to 2018) from 695 mature forest plots to quantify temporal trends in living vegetation carbon turnover time across tropical, temperate, and cold climate zones, and compared plot data to 8 Earth system models (ESMs). Long-term plots consistently showed decreases in living vegetation carbon turnover time, likely driven by increased tree mortality across all major climate zones. Changes in living vegetation carbon turnover time were negatively correlated with CO 2 enrichment in both forest plot data and ESM simulations. However, plot-based correlations between living vegetation carbon turnover time and climate drivers such as precipitation and temperature diverged from those of ESM simulations. Our analyses suggest that forest carbon sinks are likely to be constrained by a decrease in living vegetation carbon turnover time, and accurate projections of forest carbon sink dynamics will require an improved representation of tree mortality processes and their sensitivity to climate in ESMs.

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  • Guo, Y., Peng, C., Zhu, Q., Wang, M., Wang, H., Peng, S., & He, H. (2019). Modelling the impacts of climate and land use changes on soil water erosion: Model applications, limitations and future challenges. Journal of Environmental Management, 250, 109403. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2019.109403
    Consulter sur linkinghub.elsevier.com
  • Li, M., Peng, C., Zhou, X., Yang, Y., Guo, Y., Shi, G., & Zhu, Q. (2019). Modeling Global Riverine DOC Flux Dynamics From 1951 to 2015. Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems, 11(2), 514–530. https://doi.org/10.1029/2018MS001363

    Abstract Climate change has a profound impact on the global carbon cycle, including effects on riverine carbon pools, which connect terrestrial, oceanic, and atmospheric carbon pools. Until now, terrestrial ecosystem models have rarely incorporated riverine carbon components into global carbon budgets. Here we developed a new process‐based model, TRIPLEX‐HYDRA (TRIPLEX‐hydrological routing algorithm), that considers the production, consumption, and transport processes of nonanthropogenic dissolved organic carbon (DOC) from soil to river ecosystems. After the parameter calibration, model results explained more than 50% of temporal variations in all but three rivers. Validation results suggested that DOC yield simulated by TRIPLEX‐HYDRA has a good fit ( R 2  = 0.61, n  = 71, p  < 0.001) with global river observations. And then, we applied this model for global rivers. We found that mean DOC yield of global river approximately 1.08 g C/m 2  year, where most high DOC yield appeared in the rivers from high northern or tropic regions. Furthermore, our results suggested that global riverine DOC flux appeared a significant decrease trend (average rate: 0.38 Pg C/year) from 1951 to 2015, although the variation patterns of DOC fluxes in global rivers are diverse. A decreasing trend in riverine DOC flux appeared in the middle and high northern latitude regions (30–90°N), which could be attributable to an increased flow path and DOC degradation during the transport process. Furthermore, increasing trend of DOC fluxes is found in rivers from tropical regions (30°S–30°N), which might be related to an increase in terrestrial organic carbon input. Many other rivers (e.g., Mississippi, Yangtze, and Lena rivers) experienced no significant changes under a changing environment. , Key Points Terrestrial ecosystem models rarely incorporate riverine DOC components into the global carbon cycle The TRIPLEX‐HYDRA model simulates the spatiotemporal variation in the DOC fluxes in global rivers The global riverine DOC flux simulated by the TRIPLEX‐HYDRA model has significantly decreased from 1951 to 2015

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  • Liu, Z., Peng, C., De Grandpré, L., Candau, J.-N., Work, T., Huang, C., & Kneeshaw, D. (2019). Simulation and Analysis of the Effect of a Spruce Budworm Outbreak on Carbon Dynamics in Boreal Forests of Quebec. Ecosystems, 22(8), 1838–1851. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10021-019-00377-7
    Consulter sur link.springer.com
  • Yue, K., Peng, Y., Fornara, D. A., Van Meerbeek, K., Vesterdal, L., Yang, W., Peng, C., Tan, B., Zhou, W., Xu, Z., Ni, X., Zhang, L., Wu, F., & Svenning, J. (2019). Responses of nitrogen concentrations and pools to multiple environmental change drivers: A meta‐analysis across terrestrial ecosystems. Global Ecology and Biogeography, 28(5), 690–724. https://doi.org/10.1111/geb.12884

    Abstract Aim We sought to understand how the individual and combined effects of multiple environmental change drivers differentially influence terrestrial nitrogen (N) concentrations and N pools and whether the interactive effects of these drivers are mainly antagonistic, synergistic or additive. Location Worldwide. Time period Contemporary. Major taxa studied Plants, soil, and soil microbes in terrestrial ecosystems. Methods We synthesized data from manipulative field studies from 758 published articles to estimate the individual, combined and interactive effects of key environmental change drivers (elevated CO 2 , warming, N addition, phosphorus addition, increased rainfall and drought) on plant, soil, and soil microbe N concentrations and pools using meta‐analyses. We assessed the influences of moderator variables on these effects through structural equation modelling. Results We found that (a) N concentrations and N pools were significantly affected by the individual and combined effects of multiple drivers, with N addition (either alone or in combination with another driver) showing the strongest positive effects; (b) the individual and combined effects of these drivers differed significantly between N concentrations and N pools in plants, but seldom in soils and microbes; (c) additive effects of driver pairs on N concentrations and pools were much more common than synergistic or antagonistic effects across plants, soils and microbes; and (d) environmental and experimental factors were important moderators of the individual, combined and interactive effects of these drivers on terrestrial N. Main conclusions Our results indicate that terrestrial N concentrations and N pools, especially those of plants, can be significantly affected by the individual and combined effects of environmental change drivers, with the interactive effects of these drivers being mostly additive. Our findings are important because they contribute to the development of models to better predict how altered N availability affects ecosystem carbon cycling under future environmental changes.

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  • Wang, M., Tian, J., Bu, Z., Lamit, L. J., Chen, H., Zhu, Q., & Peng, C. (2019). Structural and functional differentiation of the microbial community in the surface and subsurface peat of two minerotrophic fens in China. Plant and Soil, 437(1–2), 21–40. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11104-019-03962-w
    Consulter sur link.springer.com
  • Zhu, G., Tang, Z., Shangguan, Z., Peng, C., & Deng, L. (2019). Factors Affecting the Spatial and Temporal Variations in Soil Erodibility of China. Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface, 124(3), 737–749. https://doi.org/10.1029/2018JF004918

    Abstract Soil erosion occurs extensively across China, leading to severe degradation of the land and ecosystem services. However, the spatial and temporal variations in soil erodibility ( k ) and the distribution of soil erosion across land use types and slopes remain unclear. We synthesized the results from 325 sites published in 152 literatures to analyze the factors affecting the k , such as land use type, climate, topography, soil, and vegetation restoration age. The results showed that areas with slopes >25° had a larger k factor ( k =  0.1047) than did those with slope <6° ( k =  0.0637) or 6–25° ( k =  0.0832). The k from 2006 to 2011 ( k =  0.0725) was higher than that from 1999 to 2005 ( k =  0.058) and that from 2012 to 2016 ( k =  0.0631). The k value initially increased with vegetation restoration age and then gradually decreased. Land use also had an impact on the k factor, with the k factor of cropland ( k =  0.0697) being higher than that of grassland ( k =  0.0663) but lower than that of forest ( k =  0.0967). Across China, North Shaanxi, Heilongjiang, and South Guizhou, which are located in the Loess Plateau in Northwest China, the Black Soil region of Northeast China, and the Karst areas in Southwest China, respectively, were the three most severely eroded regions due to hydraulic erosion, frost‐thaw erosion, and high‐intensity erosion, respectively. Overall, the most important factors affecting the k were soil characteristics, followed by topography and climate. Among them, soil nitrogen and precipitation were the two most critical factors influencing the k . , Key Points Grassland had lower soil erodibility than had cropland and forestland North Shaanxi, Heilongjiang, and South Guizhou were the three most severely eroded regions Precipitation and soil N play critical roles in controlling soil erosion

    Consulter sur agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com
  • Jiang, L., Chen, H., Zhu, Q., Yang, Y., Li, M., Peng, C., Zhu, D., & He, Y. (2019). Assessment of frozen ground organic carbon pool on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. Journal of Soils and Sediments, 19(1), 128–139. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11368-018-2006-3
    Consulter sur link.springer.com
  • Liu, C., Zhou, X., Lei, X., Huang, H., Zhou, C., Peng, C., & Wang, X. (2019). Separating Regressions for Model Fitting to Reduce the Uncertainty in Forest Volume-Biomass Relationship. Forests, 10(8), 658. https://doi.org/10.3390/f10080658

    The method of forest biomass estimation based on a relationship between the volume and biomass has been applied conventionally for estimating stand above- and below-ground biomass (SABB, t ha−1) from mean growing stock volume (m3 ha−1). However, few studies have reported on the diagnosis of the volume-SABB equations fitted using field data. This paper addresses how to (i) check parameters of the volume-SABB equations, and (ii) reduce the bias while building these equations. In our analysis, all equations were applied based on the measurements of plots (biomass or volume per hectare) rather than individual trees. The volume-SABB equation is re-expressed by two Parametric Equations (PEs) for separating regressions. Stem biomass is an intermediate variable (parametric variable) in the PEs, of which one is established by regressing the relationship between stem biomass and volume, and the other is created by regressing the allometric relationship of stem biomass and SABB. A graphical analysis of the PEs proposes a concept of “restricted zone,” which helps to diagnose parameters of the volume-SABB equations in regression analyses of field data. The sampling simulations were performed using pseudo data (artificially generated in order to test a model) for the model test. Both analyses of the regression and simulation demonstrate that the wood density impacts the parameters more than the allometric relationship does. This paper presents an applicable method for testing the field data using reasonable wood densities, restricting the error in field data processing based on limited field plots, and achieving a better understanding of the uncertainty in building those equations.

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  • Liu, C., Xiang, W., Zou, L., Lei, P., Zeng, Y., Ouyang, S., Deng, X., Fang, X., Liu, Z., & Peng, C. (2019). Variation in the functional traits of fine roots is linked to phylogenetics in the common tree species of Chinese subtropical forests. Plant and Soil, 436(1–2), 347–364. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11104-019-03934-0
    Consulter sur link.springer.com
  • Wu, H., Xiang, W., Ouyang, S., Forrester, D. I., Zhou, B., Chen, L., Ge, T., Lei, P., Chen, L., Zeng, Y., Song, X., Peñuelas, J., & Peng, C. (2019). Linkage between tree species richness and soil microbial diversity improves phosphorus bioavailability. Functional Ecology, 33(8), 1549–1560. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2435.13355

    Abstract Increased availability of soil phosphorus (P) has recently been recognised as an underlying driving factor for the positive relationship between plant diversity and ecosystem function. The effects of plant diversity on the bioavailable forms of P involved in biologically mediated rhizospheric processes and how the link between plant and soil microbial diversity facilitates soil P bioavailability, however, remain poorly understood. This study quantified four forms of bioavailable P (CaCl 2 ‐P, citric‐P, enzyme‐P and HCl‐P) in mature subtropical forests using a novel biologically based approach, which emulates how rhizospheric processes influence the release and supply of available P. Soil microbial diversity was measured by Illumina high‐throughput sequencing. Our results suggest that tree species richness significantly affects soil microbial diversity ( p  < 0.05), increases litter decomposition, fine‐root biomass and length and soil organic carbon and thus increases the four forms of bioavailable P. A structural equation model that links plants, soil microbes and P forms indicated that soil bacterial and fungal diversity play dominant roles in mediating the effects of tree species richness on soil P bioavailability. An increase in the biodiversity of plants, soil bacteria and fungi could maintain soil P bioavailability and alleviate soil P limitations. Our results imply that biodiversity strengthens plant and soil feedback and increases P recycling. A plain language summary is available for this article.

    Consulter sur besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com
  • Ouyang, S., Xiang, W., Wang, X., Xiao, W., Chen, L., Li, S., Sun, H., Deng, X., Forrester, D. I., Zeng, L., Lei, P., Lei, X., Gou, M., & Peng, C. (2019). Effects of stand age, richness and density on productivity in subtropical forests in China. Journal of Ecology, 107(5), 2266–2277. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2745.13194

    Abstract Forest productivity may be determined not only by biodiversity but also by environmental factors and stand structure attributes. However, the relative importance of these factors in determining productivity is still controversial for subtropical forests. Based on a large dataset from 600 permanent forest inventory plots across subtropical China, we examined the relationship between biodiversity and forest productivity and tested whether stand structural attributes (stand density in terms of trees per ha, age and tree size) and environmental factors (climate and site conditions) had larger effects on productivity. Furthermore, we quantified the relative importance of environmental factors, stand structure and diversity in determining forest productivity. Diversity, together with stand structure and site conditions, regulated the variability in forest productivity. The relationship between diversity and forest productivity did not vary along environmental gradients. Stand density and age were more important modulators of forest productivity than diversity. Synthesis . Diversity had significant and positive effects on productivity in species‐rich subtropical forests, but the effects of stand density and age were also important. Our work highlights that while biodiversity conservation is often important, the regulation of stand structure can be even more important to maintain high productivity in subtropical forests.

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