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Hongbin Liu

Researcher at Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

Publications -  388
Citations -  10841

Hongbin Liu is an academic researcher from Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Environmental science & Biology. The author has an hindex of 48, co-authored 308 publications receiving 7735 citations. Previous affiliations of Hongbin Liu include Ocean University of China & University of Hawaii.

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Variability in copepod trophic levels and in feeding selectivity based on stable isotope analysis in Gwangyang Bay off the southern coast of Korea

TL;DR: Overall, the results depict a simple energy flow of the planktonic food web of Gwangyang Bay: from primary producers (nanoplankton) and a mixture of primary producers and herbivores (microplankton), through omnivores and detrivores ( Acartia, Paracalanus, and Corycaeus) to carnivores ( Tortanus, Labidocera, and Sinocalanus).
Journal ArticleDOI

Distribution and activity of ammonia-oxidizers on the size-fractionated particles in the Pearl River estuary

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the DNA and cDNA-based genes on three size-fractionated particles of > 3.0 μm, 0.45 µm, and 0.22 µm.
Posted ContentDOI

Genetic Diversity and Distributional Pattern of Ammonia Oxidizing Archaea Lineages in the Global Oceans

TL;DR: New insight is provided to the genetic diversity of AOA in global scale and its connections with environmental factors, and at fine-scale genetic diversity, SCM1-like and 2 WCA subclades showed distinctive niche separation of distributional pattern.

Primary productivity and photosynthetic features of phytoplankton in the Sea of Okhotsk during late summer

TL;DR: Tomonori Isada, Koji Suzuki, Hongbin Liu, Jun Nishioka and Takeshi Nakatsuka as discussed by the authors proposed a method for low-temperature science at Hokkaido University.
Journal ArticleDOI

Transcriptomic response of Daphnia magna to nitrogen- or phosphorus-limited diet.

TL;DR: In this article, the physiological fitness and transcriptomic response of Daphnia magna when exposed to nitrogen (N)-limited or phosphorus (P)-limited algal diet (Chlamydomonas reinhardtii) compared to regular algae (N and P saturated) were investigated.