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Xiaoke Wang
Researcher at Chinese Academy of Sciences
Publications - 239
Citations - 9323
Xiaoke Wang is an academic researcher from Chinese Academy of Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ecosystem & Greenhouse gas. The author has an hindex of 42, co-authored 226 publications receiving 7330 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Improvements in ecosystem services from investments in natural capital
Zhiyun Ouyang,Hua Zheng,Yi Xiao,Stephen Polasky,Jianguo Liu,Weihua Xu,Qiao Wang,Lu Zhang,Yang Xiao,Enming Rao,Ling Jiang,Fei Lu,Xiaoke Wang,Guangbin Yang,Shihan Gong,Bingfang Wu,Yuan Zeng,Wu Yang,Gretchen C. Daily +18 more
TL;DR: Overall, ecosystem services improved from 2000 to 2010, apart from habitat provision, and China’s national conservation policies contributed significantly to the increases in those ecosystem services.
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Strengthening protected areas for biodiversity and ecosystem services in China
Weihua Xu,Yi Xiao,Jingjing Zhang,Wu Yang,Lu Zhang,Vanessa Hull,Zhi Wang,Hua Zheng,Jianguo Liu,Stephen Polasky,Ling Jiang,Yang Xiao,Xuewei Shi,Enming Rao,Fei Lu,Xiaoke Wang,Gretchen C. Daily,Zhiyun Ouyang +17 more
TL;DR: It is found that China’s nature reserves serve moderately well for mammals and birds, but not for other major taxa, nor for these key regulating ecosystem services, and a new category of PAs globally is proposed, for sustaining the provision of ecosystems services and achieving sustainable development goals.
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Soil carbon sequestrations by nitrogen fertilizer application, straw return and no-tillage in China's cropland
TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper investigated the relationship between soil carbon sequestration and nitrogen fertilizer application, straw return and no-tillage (NT) practices for each of the four agricultural regions in China.
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Ground-level O3 pollution and its impacts on food crops in China: a review.
TL;DR: It is found that throughout China current and future O3 levels induce wheat yield loss by 6.4-14.4% and 14.8-23.0% respectively, based on exposure concentration and stomatal O3 flux-response relationships obtained from the O3-FACE experimental results in China.
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Protecting China's Biodiversity
TL;DR: In this article, the authors address three major issues that need to be considered by the new leaders as they establish their policies for biodiversity conservation: the process of reserve establishment needs evaluation and the administrative system is not effectively coordinated, reserves are insufficiently funded and seriously understaffed, and more attention to local residents is required.