Chunsheng Wang

Chunsheng Wang
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Chunsheng verified their affiliation via an institutional email.
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Chunsheng verified their affiliation via an institutional email.
  • Phd
  • Professor (Associate) at Chinese Academy of Forestry

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About

26
Publications
3,029
Reads
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210
Citations
Introduction
Chun-Sheng Wang currently works at the Research Institute of Tropical Forestry, Chinese Academy of Forestry. Chun-Sheng does research in Forestry.
Current institution
Chinese Academy of Forestry
Current position
  • Professor (Associate)
Additional affiliations
September 2018 - November 2018
Rottenburg University of Applied Forest Sciences
Position
  • Fellow
July 2015 - present
Chinese Academy of Forestry
Position
  • Researcher
Education
September 2010 - July 2015
Chinese Academy of Forestry
Field of study
  • Silviculture
September 2006 - July 2010
Shandong Agricultural University
Field of study
  • Forestry

Publications

Publications (26)
Article
Knot-related defects are important criteria for timber grading of valuable tree species. Clear-wood production through pruning has been an important issue in silviculture and forest management. In this study, knot attributes, branch occlusion and discoloration under natural and artificial pruning were investigated in a 10-year-old Betula alnoides p...
Article
Foliage spatial distribution and morphological variation within crowns reflect the adjustment of a tree to acclimatise to different microenvironments within crowns and stands. They play important roles in the light use efficiency, carbon assimilation and photosynthesis capacity of the whole tree. In this study, leaf quantity and size at the tree an...
Article
Spatial distribution and season-induced variations in foliar nutrients of tree crowns play key roles in growth, and nutrient retranslocation and resorption from leaves are important mechanisms for trees to cope with sites of diversified fertility. Seasonal dynamics and spatial patterns of foliar macronutrients (Nitrogen (N), Phosphorus (P) and Pota...
Article
The quantitative and morphological characteristics of branches are key factors influencing both tree growth and wood quality. The effects of stand density and artificial pruning on branch development have been widely studied in monoculture, while branch development in mixed forests has rarely been reported. In this study, branch development of Betu...
Article
Full-text available
The risk of forest diseases is on the rise due to climate change and the consequential increase in extreme weather events, which disrupt the balance between pathogen, hosts, and the environment. This study analyzed two consecutive outbreaks of canker disease in Betula alnoides (Buch.-Ham. ex D. Don 1825) plantations and the temperature and precipit...
Article
Full-text available
Tree height (H) and stem diameter at breast height (DBH) (H-D) relationship is correlated with timber yield and quality as well as stability of forest and is crucial in forest management and genetic breeding. It is influenced by not only environmental factors such as site quality and climate factors but also genetic control that is mostly neglected...
Article
Full-text available
Introduction Soil microorganisms are the key factors in elucidating the effects of thinning on tree growth performance, but the effects of vegetation and soil on the species composition and function of soil microorganisms after thinning are still not well elaborated. Methods The effects of thinning on understory vegetation diversity, soil physicoc...
Article
The quantitative and morphological characteristics of branches are key factors influencing both tree growth and wood quality. The effects of stand density and artificial pruning on branch development have been widely studied in monoculture, while branch development in mixed forests has rarely been reported. In this study, branch development of Betu...
Article
Erythrophleum fordii Oliv. (Caesalpiniaceae) is a rosewood species naturally distributed in southeast Asia and south China, and the heartwood is commonly used for high-quality crafts and furniture. While there are differences in heartwood development among single trees with distinct social status, the relationship between heartwood development and...
Article
Full-text available
Betula alnoides is a valuable timber species with wide ecological adaptability in Southeast Asia and southern China. There are more than 150,000 ha of B. alnoides plantations in China until now. However, heavy differentiation in growth and quality traits with low productivity are usually seen in the practice. Elite germplasm are thus urgently neede...
Article
Full-text available
The rainy seasons have been becoming irregular and unpredictable under global warming now. This usually makes seedling preparation more difficult to match transplanting. Here applications of plant growth regulators, paclobutrazol (PBZ) and gibberellins (GA3) were studied with two trials to regulate growth of Betula alnoides Buch. Ham. ex D. Don con...
Article
Full-text available
Erythrophleum fordii Oliv. is a valuable rosewood species indigenous to the tropical and warm sub-tropical zones of Vietnam, Laos, and South China. The natural forests have been heavily fragmented mostly due to over-exploitation and over-utilization, and alteration to croplands and fast-growing plantations. Therefore, it has been included in the IU...
Article
Full-text available
Branch development in the lower part of stem is critical to both early stem growth and wood quality of the most valuable section of tree, and its regulation through planting density has always been greatly concerned. Here the effect of planting density on branch development was examined in a five-year-old plantation of Betula alnoides with six plan...
Article
Betula alnoides is a fast-growing hardwood species grown in large plantations in Southeast Asia and South China. Nitrogen requirements for producing robust seedlings, growth and nutrient dynamics were investigated using exponential fertilization treatments. Root collar diameter, height, dry mass and nutrient contents of seedlings increased exponent...
Article
Both crown and branch characteristics greatly affect tree growth and timber quality, and their development is closely related to planting density. In the present study, crown and branch attributes of Betula alnoides Buch. Ham. ex D. Don were investigated in a 14 years old experimental plantation in southern China with five planting densities rangin...
Article
Full-text available
Objective: Simulating bark thickness for Betula alnoides plantations can help to estimate its wood volume, timber outturn and bark volume. Method: The datasets including diameters of outside and inside bark and bark thickness at each stem segment were obtained through stem analysis of B. alnoides trees, and were randomly divided into two parts, abo...
Article
Full-text available
Premise of the study: Microsatellite markers were developed for Vatica mangachapoi (Dipterocarpaceae), an endangered species indigenous to Southeast Asia and southern China. Methods and Results: Twenty microsatellite markers, including 12 polymorphic markers, were identified from V. mangachapoi using high-throughput sequencing. Polymorphism at each...
Article
Full-text available
Accurate stem taper functions are necessary for estimating stem diameter, form and tree volume, and are important for wood estimation and timber utilization. Betula alnoides is a valuable plantation hardwood species under large-scale development in South-East Asia and south China, but no study on its stem taper has been reported yet. Here, 28 well-...
Article
Knot-related defects are important criteria for timber grading of valuable tree species. Clear-wood production through pruning has been an important issue in silviculture and forest management. In this study, knot attributes, branch occlusion and discoloration under natural and artificial pruning were investigated in a 10-year-old Betula alnoides p...
Article
Full-text available
We studied the formation of heartwood in Erythrophleum fordii Oliv., an endangered rosewood species, by cross-section analysis on 52 stumps aged 28–57 years and arbitrarily sampled from natural forests in South China. Width and area of heartwood were positively correlated with age and xylem width (XW), and were independent of annual radial growth....
Article
Full-text available
Knot-related defects are the major cause of timber quality degradation, and diminishing this kind of defects is an important issue in forest management. For the purpose of clear-wood production, knot attributes and branch occlusion of Betula alnoides under natural pruning were investigated in a 14-year-old experimental plantation with five planting...

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