Jinfeng Chang profile picture

Jinfeng Chang

Guest Research Scholar

Integrated Biosphere Futures Research Group

Biodiversity and Natural Resources Program

Biography

Jinfeng Chang is a guest research scholar in the Integrated Biosphere Futures Research Group of the IIASA Biodiversity and Natural Resources Program, as well as a researcher at the College of Environmental and Resource Sciences, Zhejiang University, China. From 2018-2020, he also worked as a research scholar in the former IIASA Ecosystems Services and Management Program, focusing on the impacts of climate and socioeconomic land use change on the nutrient balance of agricultural systems. He is interested in the integrated assessment of land systems, as well as the impacts of climate change and management on those.

Chang holds a PhD in environmental science from Universite de Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines (UVSQ), France. He conducted his doctoral research and post-doctoral research at Institut Pierre-Simon Laplace, France, working as part of the Laboratory of Climate and the Environment and the Laboratory of Oceanography and Climatology. His research mainly focused on the carbon and nutrient cycles of grasslands at regional and global scale. He also holds a master’s degree in Ecology from Peking University in China.

Last update: 24 JAN 2024

Publications

Sun, Y., Goll, D.S., Chang, J. , Ciais, P., Guenet, B., Helfenstein, J., Huang, Y., Lauerwald, R., Maignan, F., Naipal, V., Wang, Y., Yang, H., & Zhang, H. (2021). Global evaluation of the nutrient-enabled version of the land surface model ORCHIDEE-CNP v1.2 (r5986). Geoscientific Model Development 14 (4) 1987-2010. 10.5194/gmd-14-1987-2021.

Nandintsetseg, B., Boldgiv, B., Chang, J. , Ciais, P., Davaanyam, E., Batbold, A., Bat-Oyun, T., & Stenseth, N.C. (2021). Risk and vulnerability of Mongolian grasslands under climate change. Environmental Research Letters 16 (3) e034035. 10.1088/1748-9326/abdb5b.

Chang, J. , Gasser, T. , Smith, P., Herrero, M., Havlik, P. , Obersteiner, M. , Guenet, B., Goll, D.S., Li, W., Naipal, V., Peng, S., Qiu, C., Tian, H., Viovy, N., Yue, C., & Zhu, D. (2021). Climate warming from managed grasslands cancels the cooling effect of carbon sinks in sparsely grazed and natural grasslands. Nature Communications 10.1038/s41467-020-20406-7.