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2019 SSE, TERN and TaiwanFlux Joint Meeting

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Program

(stand: October 09, 2019)

1. Note for oral presentations on October 24

  • Presentation 15 min + discussion 5 min

  • Please upload the presentation file (.ppt, .pptx, .pdf or .odt) before your session

  • Naming rule: (3-digit oral presentation code).ppt (or .pptx, .pdf, .odt) e.g. L01.pptx (Lecture number 01 by Dr. Chaolun Allen Chen). The oral presentation code could be found before your presentation title

  • Basically, you are NOT allowed to use your own laptop to ensure smooth running of the meeting

2. Note for poster presentations

  • Format of the poster: A0 portrait

  • Posters will be displayed outside of the lecture hall from the beginning of the meeting. The discussion of posters could be done throughout the 3-day meeting period

  • The poster session on 19:00-20:00, October 24th is for the 5-min talks of the poster presenters. Please prepare a 5-min presentation file (.ppt, .pptx, .pdf, or .odt) and upload it before the session

  • Naming rule: similar to the oral presentation (see above) but using the (3-digit poster presentation code).ppt

3. Note for TERN site activity reports on October 23rd

  • Time for each site report: 5-10 min

  • Naming rule of the presentation file: similar to the oral presentation (see above) but using the (2-digit site report code).ppt

Date
Time
Program
By
Oct. 24 (Thu.)
Oral Session I
Chair: Yu-Yun Chen
08:40 - 09:00
(L01) Coral reef resilience in Taiwan: lessons from long-term ecological research on the coral reefs of Kenting National Park
Chaolun Allen Chen (Academia Sinica)
09:00 - 09:20
(L02) Terrestrial loads of dissolved organic matter drive inter-annual carbon flux in subalpine lakes undering changing rainfall
Jeng-Wei Tsai (China Medical University)
09:20 - 09:40
(L03) Long-term observation of precipitation, stream water chemistry and nutrient budgets in a subtropical forest, Fushan
Chung‐Te Chang (Tunghai University)
09:40 - 10:00
(L04) Roles of typhoon disturbances on seasonal and interannual patterns of litterfall for coniferous and broadleaf plantations in Xitou, Central Taiwan
Chih-Hsin Cheng (National Taiwan University)
10:00 - 10:40
Coffee break
Oral Session II
Chair: Min-Hui Lo
10:40 - 11:00
(L05) Monsoon effects on vascular epiphyte communities across the complex Chilan terrain in northeastern Taiwan
Chia-Chun, Hsu (Taiwan Forestry Research Institute)
11:00 - 11:20
(L06) Mountain climate velocity and species adaptation
I-Ching Chen (Natioinal Cheng Kung University)
11:20 - 11:40
(L07) Community structure and biodiversity of soil nematodes in the rice paddy
Hsuan-Wien Chen (Natioinal Chiayi University)
11:40 - 12:00
(L08) Social signatures in echolocation calls of a leaf-roosting bat, Kerivoula furva
Takefumi Nakazawa (Natioinal Cheng Kung University)
12:00 - 13:40
Lunch break
Oral Session III
Chair: I-Ling Lai
13:40 - 14:00
(L09) The uniqueness of the hydroclimatological cycle in Taiwan's mountain forest regions
Min-Hui Lo (National Taiwan University)
14:00 - 14:20
(L10) An 800-year tree-ring-based temperature reconstruction over northeastern Taiwan from Chamaecyparis obtusa var. formosana: Unprecedented early spring warming in the montane cloud forest
Nguyen Xuan Hau (National Cheng Kung University)
14:20 - 14:40
(L11) Quantifying upslope fog water interception in a mountain cloud forest
Jehn-Yih Juang (National Taiwan University)
14:40 - 15:00
(L12) Development of research and educational infrastructures using a tropical montane cloud forest ecological monitoring network in Chilan Mountain of northeastern Taiwan
Cho-Ying Huang (National Taiwan University)
15:00 - 15:20
(L13) Estimation of the methane emmission from paddy in Taiwan
Chi-Ling Chen (Taiwan Agricultural Research Institute)
15:20 - 16:00
Coffee break
Oral Session IV
Chair: Hsuan-Wien Chen

Field excursion

October 25, 2019, 08:00-12:00

The half-day field excursion will be a visit to the nearby Da-Nong-Da-Fu (DNDF) flux tower site. The site is located in the northern part of the 1250-ha DNDF plantation, which was established in 2002 after a long-term sugarcane farming since the Japanese time.

The flux tower site starts its continuous CO2/H2O flux measurement in 2017 using eddy covariance method. Besides the purpose of understanding the C sequestration and the hydrological cycle of the plantation, the patchy characteristics of the plantation is a good place for exploring the EC footprint model.

The DNDF plantation and its surrounding landscape are active research sites by several institutes including National Dong Hwa University and Taiwan Forestry Research Institute. A famous eco-farmland "LiPaHak" in the southern part of the plantation marks the diverse and environment-friendly land use change of this region, which, is a domain of resilience research of social-ecological systems.

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© 2019 by Local Organizing Committee of SSE, TERN and TaiwanFlux Joint Meeting

© 2023 by Shih-Chieh Chang

張世杰 陸域生態系實驗室

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