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Jie Lin

Researcher at Nanjing Forestry University

Publications -  18
Citations -  548

Jie Lin is an academic researcher from Nanjing Forestry University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Environmental science & Biology. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 11 publications receiving 342 citations.

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A comparative study of landslide susceptibility maps using logistic regression, frequency ratio, decision tree, weights of evidence and artificial neural network

TL;DR: In this article, a landslide inventory was partitioned into three groups as various training and test datasets to identify the most appropriate method for creating a landslide susceptibility map, and a total of fifteen landslide susceptibility maps were produced using frequency ratio, logistic regression, decision tree, weights of evidence and artificial neural network models, and the results were assessed using existing test landside points and areas under the relative operative characteristic curve.
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Landslide susceptibility mapping in Mizunami City, Japan: A comparison between logistic regression, bivariate statistical analysis and multivariate adaptive regression spline models

TL;DR: In this article, three mathematical methods, logistic regression (LR), bivariate statistical analysis (BS), and multivariate adaptive regression spline models (MARSplines), were used to create landslide susceptibility maps by comparing the past landslide distribution and the conditioning factor thematic maps.
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Effects of sulfuric, nitric, and mixed acid rain on Chinese fir sapling growth in Southern China.

TL;DR: The results suggest that the ratio of SO42- to NO3- in acid rain is an important factor which could affect the sustainable development of monoculture Chinese fir plantations in southern China.
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Autotrophic and heterotrophic soil respiration responds asymmetrically to drought in a subtropical forest in the Southeast China

TL;DR: In this paper, throughfall rainfall exclusion during two consecutive growing seasons in a subtropical forest in the Southeast China was studied, and it was shown that throughfall exclusion significantly reduced autotrophic soil respiration (Ra) and fine root metabolic capacity.
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Tissue-specific transcriptome for Dendrobium officinale reveals genes involved in flavonoid biosynthesis.

TL;DR: The flavonoid-related key enzyme genes were identified, and their expression patterns in different tissues were further analyzed using quantitative real-time PCR, which will be useful in understanding the molecular mechanisms of different tissues in Dendrobium officinale.