Meng, M.; Ni, J.; Zong, M. J.: Impacts of changes in climate variability on regional vegetation in China: NDVI-based analysis from 1982 to 2000. Ecological Research 26 (2), pp. 421 - 428 (2011)
Ashiq, M. W.; Zhao, C. Y.; Ni, J.; Akhtar, M.: GIS-based high-resolution spatial interpolation of precipitation in mountain-plain areas of Upper Pakistan for regional climate change impact studies. Theoretical and Applied Climatology 99 (3-4), pp. 239 - 253 (2010)
Ni, J.; Yu, G.; Harrison, S. P.; Prentice, I. C.: Palaeovegetation in China during the late Quaternary: Biome reconstructions based on a global scheme of plant functional types. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 289 (1-4), pp. 44 - 61 (2010)
Ni, J.; Wang, G. H.; Bai, Y. F.; Li, X. Z.: Scale-dependent relationships between plant diversity and above-ground biomass in temperate grasslands, south-eastern Mongolia. Journal of Arid Environments 68 (1), pp. 132 - 142 (2007)
Ni, J.; Harrison, S. P.; Prentice, I. C.; Kutzbach, J. E.; Sitch, S.: Impact of climate variability on present and Holocene vegetation: A model-based study. Ecological Modelling 191 (3-4), pp. 469 - 486 (2006)
Wang, G.-H.; Ni, J.: Responses of plant functional types to an environmental gradient on the Northeast China Transect. Ecological Research 20 (5), pp. 563 - 572 (2005)
Wang, Q.; Ni, J.; Tenhunen, J.: Application of a geographically-weighted regression analysis to estimate net primary production of Chinese forest ecosystems. Global Ecology and Biogeography 14 (4), pp. 379 - 393 (2005)
Ni, J.: Corrigendum to "Net primary productivity in forests of China: scaling-up of national inventory data and comparison with model predictions" (Forest Ecology and Management, vol 187 (2003), 485-495). Forest Ecology and Management 194 (1-3), p. 413 (2004)
Ni, J.: Estimating net primary productivity of grasslands from field biomass measurements in temperate northern China. Plant Ecology 174 (2), pp. 217 - 234 (2004)
Ni, J.: Forest productivity of the Altay and Tianshan Mountains in the dryland, northwestern China. Forest Ecology and Management 202 (1-3), pp. 13 - 22 (2004)
Ni, J.: Plant functional types and climate along a precipitation gradient in temperate grasslands, north-east China and south-east Mongolia. Journal of Arid Environments 53 (4), pp. 501 - 516 (2003)
Ni, J.: Net primary productivity in forests of China: scaling-up of national inventory data and comparison with model predictions. Forest Ecology and Management 176 (1-3), pp. 485 - 495 (2003)
Ni, J.; Ding, S.-Y.: Modeling the large-scale distribution of plant diversity: a possibility inferred from climate and productivity. Acta Phytoecologica Sinica 26 (5), pp. 568 - 574 (2002)
Clark, D. A.; Brown, S.; Kicklighter, D. W.; Chambers, J. Q.; Thomlinson, J. R.; Ni, J.: Measuring net primary production in forests: Concepts and field methods. Ecological Applications 11 (2), pp. 356 - 370 (2001)
Clark, D. A.; Brown, S.; Kicklighter, D. W.; Chambers, J. Q.; Thomlinson, J. R.; Ni, J.; Holland, E. A.: NPP in tropical forests: an evaluation and synthesis of existing field data. Ecological Applications 11: 371-384. Appendix 1. Estimates from the literature of net primary productivity in tropical forests. Ecological Archives A011-006-A1, pp. 1 - 19 (2001)
Extreme climate events endanger groundwater quality and stability, when rain water evades natural purification processes in the soil. This was demonstrated in long-term groundwater analyses using new analytical methods.
More frequent strong storms are destroying ever larger areas of the Amazon rainforest. Storm damage was mapped between 1985 and 2020. The total area of affected forests roughly quadrupled in the period studied.
The Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) and the German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina will hold a joint conference on the challenges of achieving carbon neutrality in Berlin on October 29-30, 2024.
The Chapter of the Order has elected the writer, philosopher and filmmaker Alexander Kluge and the mathematician Gerd Faltings as domestic members of the Order and the geologist Susan Trumbore and the literary scholar Stephen Greenblatt as foreign members.
On June 24, Prof. Dr. Henrik Hartmann, head of the Julius Kühn Institute for Forest Protection and former group leader at the Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry, received an important award for his scientific achievements in the field of forestry. Our warmest congratulations!