| 9/14/04
Katie Wilder, 344/844-9999 (wildeka@auburn.edu)
FORESTRY
RESEARCHER WINS GRANT FOR STUDY OF LAND USE IN CHINA
AUBURN - An Auburn University forestry researcher has received a $1.65
million grant to study the ecosystem and land-use changes in China.
Hanqin Tian, a professor of ecology in the School of Forestry and Wildlife
Sciences, received the grant from NASA's Interdisciplinary Science program
to investigate Chinese ecosystem sustainability during the next three
years.
"China's expanding economy -- the fastest growing in the world --
along with continued population growth will lead to land transformations
in the next decades, including dramatic urbanization," Tian said.
"While we have a qualitative sense that land transformations across
China have affected and will continue to affect the ability of China's
ecosystems to provide people with essential goods and services, our challenge
now is to quantify exactly how the provision of key goods and services
has changed."
Tian said China is an interesting country to many Americans because of
its dramatic increase in economy and population, which equals approximately
1.3 billion people. Studying how the country has sustained development
through such growth will be important to other countries, particularly
the United States, which Tian notes is similar in geographic size.
He said NASA is interested in studying China's sustainability for similar
reasons. "NASA is interested in understanding the earth's development
as a whole. Likewise, many international organizations are interested
in what is happening in China."
Using satellite data from NASA, field studies from China and an ecosystem
computer model, Tian said he will study the changes from 1980 to the present.
"We will use techniques that have been used in the United States
and the Amazon Basin and apply these techniques to China and Asia,"
Tian said.
One of the main elements of Tian's study in China will be exploring urbanization
throughout the country. "It is an important phenomenon in Asia,"
he said. "We will look at land conversion from cropland to urban
use and at deforestization."
As part of the urbanization study, Tian said he will also look at factors
such as air pollution and overall air quality and how these factors have
changed as urbanization has increased.
Tian, the study's principal investigator, is working with scientists from
Woods Hole Marine Biological Laboratory in Massachusetts, the University
of Montana and Boston University. The U.S. scientists have also formed
a partnership with the Chinese Academy of Science, which is an umbrella
organization supporting scientists from many participating Chinese institutions
working on the project.
Tian said
the project is one of only 59 proposals selected for funding by the NASA
program, which received approximately 348 proposals requesting funds this
year.
Auburn University is a comprehensive research institution with more
than 23,000 students and 6,500 faculty and staff. Ranked among the top
50 public universities nationally, Auburn is Alabama's largest educational
institution, offering more than 230 undergraduate, graduate and doctoral
degree programs.
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