Hongbo Yang
Bio
Hongbo Yang was a PhD student in the Department of Fisheries and Wildlife and the Center for Systems Integration and Sustainability who graduated in May 2018. His broad research interest was in the field of sustainability science. His PhD research focused on integrating techniques from multiple disciplines (e.g., environmental economics, remote sensing and system modeling) to study complex effects of telecoupling processes (e.g., payment for ecosystem services programs, tourism and labor migration) on the coupled human and nature systems of Wolong Nature Reserve.
Related Work
-
Spotting the human-driven snags in global sustainability quest
Published on August 25, 2022
-
EARTH INTERACTIONS - Complex effects of telecouplings on forest dynamics: an agent-based modeling approach
Published on January 1, 2022
-
World’s protected areas need more than a “do not disturb” sign
Published on April 13, 2021
-
Scientists advocate breaking laws – of geography and ecology
Published on February 2, 2021
-
FRONTIERS OF ECOLOGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT - Macrosystems as metacoupled human and natural systems
Published on February 1, 2021
-
Pandas’ popularity ‘umbrella’ not protecting neighbors
Published on January 4, 2021
-
BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION - The hidden risk of using umbrella species as conservation surrogates
Published on December 3, 2020