Research Seminar by Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences Thrust - Assessing Carbon Budgets in Agricultural and Forest Ecosystems Using the Eddy Covariance Technique

2:00pm - 3:30pm
ZOOM (ID: 914 3021 0929; Password: 286899)

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The biosphere-atmosphere carbon exchanges strongly affect the global climate. However, the carbon dynamics in various ecosystems can be altered under the changing climate, thus forming feedback between climate and ecosystem. As regional climate conditions are changing rapidly in some regions of the globe, such as the inland Pacific Northwest (iPNW) region in the US and the boreal region in northern Sweden, there is a critical need to understand how the carbon balances of agricultural and forest ecosystems vary with the local climate and management practices in these regions. In this presentation, implications of agricultural management activities and climatic conditions on carbon dynamics will be first evaluated using the long-term eddy covariance data measured at five cropping systems in the iPNW region. Furthermore, findings of the boreal forest carbon balance in northern Sweden will be demonstrated based on the carbon flux measurements from the below-canopy and tall-tower eddy covariance towers to investigate the spatiotemporal variability of the landscape-scale carbon balance. Overall, this seminar will address an interdisciplinary research topic about the carbon cycle and global change, thus providing some insights into the potential mitigation and adaptation strategies for ensuring sustainable agriculture and forestry under the risks of regional climate change.

Event Format
Speakers / Performers:
Dr. Jinshu CHI
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

Dr. Jinshu CHI: I am a postdoctoral researcher at the Department of Forest Ecology and Management, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences. I graduated from Washington State University in the US and majored in Atmospheric Sciences. Now I consider myself as a biometeorologist, a scientist at the interface between biology and meteorology. In my strongly interdisciplinary research, I strive to understand the various ways that the biosphere and the atmosphere interact and how these processes are modulated by the changing climate and human activities. Central research themes are the carbon, water, and energy cycles. My research approach involves the use of field measurements (mostly eddy covariance and other micrometeorological methods) at simple and homogeneous sites as well as complex and heterogeneous lands from plot to landscape scales.

Language
English
Recommended For
Faculty and staff
PG students
UG students
Organizer
Function Hub, HKUST(GZ)
Contact

For enquiries, please contact Miss Mumu Li (+86-20-36665825, mumuli@ust.hk )

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