11月16日上午9:00杜克大学李文弘教授学术报告通知

发布时间: 2021-11-15

“Global Climate Change and Water System Impacts” 系列主题学术讲座讲座议程


报告题目:Climate Change Impact on Wetland through Hydrological Perspectives

报  告 人:李文弘教授

邀  请 人:陈杰  教授

时      间:2021年11月16日(星期二)上午9:00-10:00

地      点:国家重点实验室学术报告厅(农水楼一楼)

              Zoom会议(ID:  873 912 5358)  

              密码:123456

报告人简介:

Dr. Li's research interests focus primarily on climate dynamics, land-atmosphere interaction, hydroclimatology, and climate modeling. Her current research is to understand how the hydrological cycle changes in the current and future climate and their impacts on the ecosystems, subtropical high variability and change, unforced global temperature variability, and climate and health issues. Dr. Li has published more than 70 papers on the peer-reviewed journals including Science,Natural Geoscience, Nature Climate Change, Proceeding of National Academy of Science (citation 5194, H-index 29), and has been invited to give lectures in and out the United States. Prof Li has served as the panel members for the US National Science Foundation (NSF), National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Dept of Energy (DOE), National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) and UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC). Her work has been highlighted/reported/broadcasted many times by Nature Climate Change, Nature Geosciences, US National Public Radio (NPR-WUNC), Union of  Concerned Scientists, and MORE magazine, etc. Professor Li was the Marie Tharp Fellow(2012-2013), the former secretary of the AGU Global Environment Change (GEC) section(2019-2020); now she takes charge of Duke Climate Change Science and Application program, Represents Duke at UCAR (University Corporation for Atmospheric Research) and serves as an editor of Journal of Climate.


报告简介:

Wetlands provide numerous essential ecosystem services for sustainable development. However, wetlands are increasingly stressed due to climate change and related hydrological extremes. In particular, in recent decades, frequent droughts, floods, in conjunction with sea level rise, have affected wetland structure dramatically, productivity, and services through altering wetland hydrological processes. Wetland degradation has been observed in many places, but the causes are not well understood especially on regional scales. In this talk, I will introduce a new regional scale hydrologic modeling framework that can well represent regional scale hydrologic interaction and landscape heterogeneity. Impact of climate change induced disturbances and extremes on the wetland ecosystems over the Southeast United States will also be discussed.


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