L
Lixin Wang
Researcher at Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis
Publications - 419
Citations - 13655
Lixin Wang is an academic researcher from Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis. The author has contributed to research in topics: Soil water & Biology. The author has an hindex of 53, co-authored 349 publications receiving 9822 citations. Previous affiliations of Lixin Wang include Hebei University of Science and Technology & Wayne State University.
Papers
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Distribution of Shrubland and Grassland Soil Erodibility on the Loess Plateau
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared the performance of different models and their usage at a regional scale and in particular for different land use types, and provided suggestions for ecological restoration and provided a case study for the estimate of soil erodibility in arid and semiarid areas.
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Stable water isotope and surface heat flux simulation using ISOLSM: Evaluation against in-situ measurements
Mick Y. Cai,Lixin Wang,S. D. Parkes,Josiah Strauss,Matthew F. McCabe,Jason P. Evans,Alan D. Griffiths +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the National Centre for Atmospheric Research stable isotope-enabled Land Surface Model (ISOLSM) is used to simulate the water and energy fluxes and stable water isotope variations.
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Age-related water use characteristics of Robinia pseudoacacia on the Loess Plateau
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated water use characteristics of Robinia pseudoacacia in plantations of different stand-age (18 and 30 years) and found that water uptake proportions from across the soil columns changed in 18-yr R. pseudoacica between a drier (2016) and wetter year (2017).
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Geographical distribution and determining factors of different invasive ranks of alien species across China
Quanlai Zhou,Yongcui Wang,Xuehua Li,Zhimin Liu,Jing Wu,Ala Musa,Qun Ma,Haibin Yu,Xue Cui,Lixin Wang +9 more
TL;DR: Results implied that precipitation was the most important factor on species density for the invasive alien species, however, social factors and temperature were theMost important factors for the non-invasive alien species.
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Diversification of rural livelihood strategies and its effect on local landscape restoration in the semiarid hilly area of the Loess Plateau, China.
TL;DR: Zhang et al. as discussed by the authors studied the diversification of livelihood strategies and the interaction of farmers' livelihood with landscape change in Zhongzhuang small watershed, Pengyang County in Ningxia Autonomous region located in the Loess Plateau, western China.