Hui Wang
Shandong Agricultural University
7 Papers
13 Citations
Hui Wang is an academic researcher from Shandong Agricultural University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Soil carbon & Soil organic matter. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 7 publications.
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Papers
35 years of manure and chemical fertilizer application alters soil microbial community composition in a Fluvo-aquic soil in Northern China
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the long-term effects of eight different fertilization regimes: two manure levels (with or without), combined with four chemical fertilizer regimes (no chemical fertilizer, N, NP, NPK) on a range of soil chemical and microbial properties in a wheat-maize/sweet potato double cropping system.
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Distinct accumulation of bacterial and fungal residues along a salinity gradient in coastal salt-affected soils
Jiancheng Chen,Hui Wang,Guoqing Hu,Xuhua Li,Yuanjie Dong,Yuping Zhuge,Hongbo He,Xudong Zhang +7 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated changes in fungal and bacterial residues using amino sugar biomarkers along a salinity gradient in coastal salt-affected soils and found that salinization had a significant impact on microbial-mediated organic carbon accumulation.
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Effects of nitrogen addition on soil organic carbon mineralization after maize stalk addition
TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of ammonium nitrate (NH4NO3) and urea (CO(NH2)2) on the priming effect (PE) of carbon inputs on soil organic matter (SOM) mineralization (i.e. change of SOM mineralization after the addition of exogenous substrate) is compared.
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Responses of natural 15N abundance in cauliflower (Brassica oleracea L. var. botrytis) and soil to the application of organic and chemical fertilizers
TL;DR: The results provide fundamental data for the soil- and fertilizer-specific crop δ15N database and indicate that the intra-plant δ 15N characteristic could be helpful for organic cauliflower identification.
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Assessment of genetic diversity and relationships based on RAPD and AFLP analyses in Miscanthus genera landraces
Y. Qin,M. A. Kabir,Hui Wang,Y. H. Lee,S. H. Hong,J. Y. Kim,Min-Jung Yook,Do-Soon Kim,Changsoo Kim,H. Kwon,Wook Kim +10 more
TL;DR: M molecular markers, random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) and amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) as well as combined RAPD and AFLP analysis were used to assess genetic diversity in a reference set of 38 Miscanthus accessions of which 32 were collected from South Korea and 6 from foreign countries.
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