Woo-Seok Kong
Kyung Hee University
27 Papers
54 Citations
Woo-Seok Kong is an academic researcher from Kyung Hee University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Climate change & Abies koreana. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 25 publications.
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Papers
Climate refugia: joint inference from fossil records, species distribution models and phylogeography
Daniel G. Gavin,Matthew C. Fitzpatrick,Paul F. Gugger,Katy D. Heath,Francisco Rodríguez-Sánchez,Solomon Z. Dobrowski,Arndt Hampe,Arndt Hampe,Feng Sheng Hu,Michael B. Ashcroft,Patrick J. Bartlein,Jessica L. Blois,Bryan C. Carstens,Edward Byrd Davis,Guillaume de Lafontaine,Mary E. Edwards,Matias Fernandez,Paul D. Henne,Erin M. Herring,Zachary A. Holden,Woo-Seok Kong,Jianquan Liu,Donatella Magri,Nicholas J. Matzke,Matt S. McGlone,Frédérik Saltré,Alycia L. Stigall,Yi-Hsin Erica Tsai,John W. Williams +28 more
TL;DR: A critical research need is to better integrate and reconcile the three major lines of evidence used to infer the existence of past refugia - fossil records, species distribution models and phylogeographic surveys - in order to characterize the complex spatiotemporal trajectories of species and populations in and out ofRefugia.
•Book
The plant geography of Korea with an emphasis on the alpine zones
Woo-Seok Kong,David Watts +1 more
- 01 Jan 1993
TL;DR: Arctic-Alpine and Alpine Floristic Elements as discussed by the authors have been used in the past for plant growth in Mt. Sorak and Mt. Eiseman in the Czech Republic.
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•Journal Article
Dendrochronological Analysis of Abies koreana W. at Mt. Halla, Korea: Effects of Climate Change on the Growths
TL;DR: The presence of large number of frost-damaged scars in the individual trees of A. koreana implies that local freezing temperature conditions at Mt. Halla National Park have occurred in 1964, 1965 and 1966, and the correlations between the fir chronology SOI(Southern Oscillation Index) of previous January, February and November were significantly positive.
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Potential Effects of Climate Change on the Distribution of Cold-Tolerant Evergreen Broadleaved Woody Plants in the Korean Peninsula.
TL;DR: A northward and upper-elevational range shift indicates change in species composition at the alpine and subalpine ecosystems in the Korean Peninsula.
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