Name: CUI Qiaoyu

Current Appointment: Associate Professor

Education:

2009/4–2013/12 Ph.D. in Environmental Science, Department of Biology and Environmental Science, Linnaeus University, Kalmar, Sweden.

2006/07-2008/07 Master degree in Quaternary Geology and Prehistory, Department of Humanities, Ferrara University, Italy.

1998/07-2002/06 Bachelor degree in Physical Geography, School of Geographical Science, Northeast Normal University, China.

Areas of Specialization:

Palaeoecology; Palaeofire; late glacial and Holocene; pollen and charcoal analysis of lake and peatland sediments.

Society Appointments:

2020 Dec.-2023 Dec. Steering Committee of PAGES Working Group “DiverseK”

https://pastglobalchanges.org/science/wg/diversek

Representative Publications:

1.       Zhang, Y., Marquer, L., Cui, Q.*, et al., 2021. Holocene vegetation changes in the transition zone between subtropical and temperate ecosystems in Eastern Central China. Quaternary Science Reviews 253, 106768

2.       Zhang, Y., Cui, Q.*, Huang, Y., et al., 2021. Vegetation Response to Holocene Climate Change in the Qinling Mountains in the Temperate–Subtropical Transition Zone of Central–East China. Front. Ecol. Evol. 9, 734011. https://doi.org/10.3389/fevo.2021.734011

3.        Yang, H., Zhao, Y., Cui, Q.*, et al., 2021. Paleoclimatic indication of X-ray fluorescence core-scanned Rb/Sr ratios: A case study in the Zoige Basin in the eastern Tibetan Plateau. Science China Earth Sciences 64 (1): 80–95

4.       Zhao, Y.*, Liang, C., Cui, Q., et al., 2021.emperature reconstructions for the last 1.74-Ma on the eastern Tibetan Plateau based on a novel pollen-based quantitative method. Global and Planetary Change, 199:103433

5.       Cui, Q.*, Gaillard, M.-J., Vanniere, B., et al., 2020. Evaluating fossil charcoal representation in small peat bogs: Detailed Holocene fire records from southern Sweden. The Holocene 30 (11): 1540–1551

6.       Cui, Q.*, 2020. Wildfire responses to millennial-and orbit-scale climate variability and vegetation changes during the last glacial-interglacial periods. Quaternary Sciences 40 (6): 1513–1521 (in Chinese)

7.       Cui, Q.*, Zhao, Y., Qin, F., et al., 2019. Characteristics of the modern pollen assemblages from different vegetation zones in northeast China: implications for pollen-based climate reconstruction. Science China Earth Sciences 62 (10): 1564–1577

8.       Cui, Q.*, Zhao, Y., 2019. Climatic abrupt events implied by lacustrine sediments of Arxan Crater Lake,in the central Great Khingan Mountains,NE China during Holocene. Quaternary Sciences 39: 13461356 (in Chinese)

9.       Geng, R., Zhao, Y., Cui, Q.*, et al., 2019. Representation of modern pollen assemblages with respect to vegetation and climate in Northeast China. Journal of Quaternary International 532: 126–137

10.    Wu, J.*, Liu, Q., Cui, Q., et al.,2019. Shrinkage of East Asia winter monsoon associated with increased ENSO events since the mid-Holocene, Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, 124: 3839-3848.

11.    Cui, Q.*, Gaillard, M.-J.*, Olsson, F., et al., 2015. A case study of the role of climate, humans, and ecological setting in Holocene fire history of northwestern Europe, Science China Earth Sciences 58(2): 195–210

12.    Cui, Q.*, Gaillard, M.-J.*, Lemdahl, G., et al., 2014. Historical land-use and landscape change in southern Sweden and implications for present and future biodiversity. Ecology and Evolution 18: 3555–3570

13.    Cui, Q.*, Gaillard, M.-J.*, Lemdahl, G., et al., 2013. The role of tree composition in Holocene fire history of the hemiboreal and southern boreal zones of southern Sweden, as revealed by the application of the Landscape Reconstruction Algorithm: Implications for biodiversity and climate-change issues, The Holocene 23(12): 1747-1763

Contact:

Office Address:

Room 630, Building No. B, IGSNRR

11A Da Tun Road

Chao Yang, Beijing 100101

People’s Republic of China

Telephone: 86-10-6488-9830

Email: qiaoyu.cui@igsnrr.ac.cn

Updated on November 15, 2022