C. Wang
University of Kiel
13 Papers
133 Citations
C. Wang is an academic researcher from University of Kiel. The author has contributed to research in topics: Grazing & Steppe. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 11 publications. Previous affiliations of C. Wang include Inner Mongolia Agricultural University.
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Papers
Short-term management and stocking rate effects of grazing sheep on herbage quality and productivity of Inner Mongolia steppe
Philipp Schönbach,Hongwei Wan,A. Schiborra,Martin Gierus,Yongfei Bai,K. Müller,T. Glindemann,C. Wang,Andreas Susenbeth,Friedhelm Taube +9 more
TL;DR: Grazing effects on relative growth rate indicated grazing tolerance of plants in the short-term, since up to high stocking rates, relative growth rates remained stable, and neither productivity nor herbage quality was affected by the management system, suggesting that both systems may be applicable on typical steppe in the long-term.
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Evaluation of titanium dioxide as an inert marker for estimating faecal excretion in grazing sheep
TL;DR: These experiments show that TiO 2 is a reliable marker for estimating faecal excretion in grazing sheep and prediction accuracy of faecic excretion was higher with twice than once dailyTiO 2 administration and grab sampling.
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Fecal crude protein content as an estimate for the digestibility of forage in grazing sheep.
TL;DR: In this article, regression equations were developed to predict the organic matter digestibility of forage-based diets from contents of crude protein (CP) and acid detergent soluble CP (ADSCP) in feces, with data (721 observations of nine types of diets) obtained from in vivo digestibility trials with sheep conducted at the Federal Research Centre of Agriculture, Braunschweig, Germany and in Inner Mongolia, China.
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Growth of sheep as affected by grazing system and grazing intensity in the steppe of Inner Mongolia, China
L. Lin,Uta Dickhoefer,K. Müller,C. Wang,T. Glindemann,Jun Hao,Hongwei Wan,Philipp Schönbach,Martin Gierus,Friedhelm Taube,Andreas Susenbeth +10 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of different grazing management systems and grazing intensities (GI) on liveweight gain (LWG) of sheep grazing the Inner Mongolian steppe in order to derive recommendations for a sustainable grassland use which considers both, farmers' interests of a profitable livestock production as well as environmental goals.
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Effects of rotational and continuous grazing on herbage quality, feed intake and performance of sheep on a semi-arid grassland steppe.
Jun Hao,Uta Dickhoefer,L. Lin,K. Müller,T. Glindemann,Philipp Schönbach,A. Schiborra,C. Wang,Andreas Susenbeth +8 more
TL;DR: The study showed that RG does not improve herbage growth, feed intake and performance of sheep and suggests that stocking rates rather than management system determine the ecological sustainability of pastoral livestock systems in semi-arid environments.
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