Information

Seminor

Seminor this year
2023/4/28(Fri) 13:30 S124(Japanses)
Speaker:Yamaguchi (M2), Moriguchi (M2)

2023/4/21(Fri) 13:30 S124(English)
Speaker:Chen Siyu (D2)
     "Plan for the school year 2023"
     Xu Dingkang (D2)
     "Plan for the school year 2023"

2023/4/14(Fri) 13:30 S124(English)
Speaker:Yoshiko Kosugi
     "Plan for the school year 2023"
     Daniel Epron
     "Plan for the school year 2023"
     Ayaka Sakabe
     "Plan for the school year 2023"
    We will take a photo before the seminor on 14th April.

2023/4/3(月) 10:00
 First contact, Crean up of the room, Seat change. 
 

NEWS

Prof. Daniel Epron and Assistant prof. Ayaka Sakabe will become regular stuffs of our labo from this April. (2023/4/1)

Dr. Jiao Linjie got PhD degree. (2023/3/24)

Forest Hydrology Labo belongs to the division of Forest and Biomaterials Science, starting at April 2022. (2022/4/1)

Our labo used to belong to the Division of Environmental Scicence, but will belong to the Division of Forest and Biomaterials Science, starting with students admitted to the graduate school in the 2022 school year. Current students will be affiliated with the former division until graduation.

■Ms. Chen Siyu (D1) got the poster award at AsiaFlux Online Conference 2021 (2021/12/21)

Mr. Ryota Shirai (M2) got the poster award at the 132th annual meeting ot the Japanese Forest Society (2021/3/23)

■Ms. Chen Siyu (M2) got the English presentation award at the 68th annual meeting of the Ecological Society of Japan (2021/3/18)

■Mr. Chang Tingwei (D2) got the poster award at AsiaFlux Annual Meeting (2019.10.8)

Facebook page was opened by the students(2018/6/8)

Seminor information

Every Fri 13:30- @Main Building of the Faculty of Agriculture, S174

Welcome to our labo!

 The Forest Hydrology Laboratory conducts research to scientifically clarify the various functions of forests, such as green dams, global warming mitigation, atmospheric purification, climate mitigation, and water purification. Many of these functions are performed by water and carbon going around the forest. Transpiration is necessary to maintain photosynthesys by tree leaves, which is the root of material production and material cycles in forest ecosystems. Evapotranspiration also helps stabilize temperature, precipitation, and other factors. Water stored in forest soils provides water for transpiration of plants and slowly flows out to rivers, helping to reduce disasters and store water resources. To understand the sustainability and limits of forest functions, we are conducting research to determine how water and carbon are circulating in forests based on various observations.