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Bangqin Huang

Researcher at Xiamen University

Publications -  163
Citations -  4672

Bangqin Huang is an academic researcher from Xiamen University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Phytoplankton & Upwelling. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 143 publications receiving 3328 citations. Previous affiliations of Bangqin Huang include Chinese Ministry of Education.

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Distinct patterns and processes of abundant and rare eukaryotic plankton communities following a reservoir cyanobacterial bloom.

TL;DR: Co-occurrence network analysis revealed that keystone taxa mainly belonged to rare species, which may play fundamental roles in network persistence, implying multispecies cooperation might contribute to the stability and resilience of the microbial community.
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Rising CO2 and increased light exposure synergistically reduce marine primary productivity

TL;DR: It is shown that the combination of an increase in both CO2 and light exposure negatively impacts photosynthesis and growth of marine primary producers, and this may cause a widespread decline in marine primary production and a community shift away from diatoms.
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Warming and eutrophication combine to restructure diatoms and dinoflagellates.

TL;DR: Diatoms and dinoflagellates responded differently to temperature, nutrient concentrations and ratios, and their interactions, which resulted in both the effect of warming resulting in nutrients decline as a consequence of increasing stratification and theeffect of increasing terrestrial nutrient input as a result of eutrophication might promote din oflageLLates over diatoms.
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Ecological anomalies in the East China Sea: Impacts of the three gorges dam?

TL;DR: Examination of possible impacts of the Yangtze River Three Gorges Dam on the adjacent marine ecosystem of the East China Sea during its initial water storage period found sudden decrease of river runoff and ensuing intrusion of ECS ocean currents to be among the major ones.
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Abundant and rare picoeukaryotic sub-communities present contrasting patterns in the epipelagic waters of marginal seas in the northwestern Pacific Ocean

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared patterns of abundant and rare picoeukaryotic sub-communities in the epipelagic waters (surface and 40-75 m depth subsurface layers) of the East and South China Seas across seasons via 454 pyrosequencing of the V4 region of 18S rDNA.