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This profile was automatically generated using 7 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 7 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
View all 7 references Web References
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1. www.biovision.org
www.biovision.org/speakers.htm - [Cached]Published on: 4/27/2008 Last Visited: 5/26/2008
Li Fengting, Professor, Tongji University -
2. Professor Li Fengting, Associate Dean, College of Environmental Science and Engineering, UNEP - Tongji University Institute of Environment for Sustainable Development, Tongji University (China)
www.pbecigm2005.org/lifengting - [Cached]Published on: 10/12/2004 Last Visited: 10/23/2005
Professor Li Fengting, Associate Dean, College of Environmental Science and Engineering, UNEP - Tongji University Institute of Environment for Sustainable Development, Tongji University (China)
My research is directed to the study of environmental chemistry, with a special focus on agricultural chemicals, its intereactivity with colloids, their environmental behavior in the transport, deposition, speciation, and bioavailability. -
3. China Daily Print Edition
www1.chinadaily.com.cn/en/doc/ - [Cached]Published on: 8/5/2003 Last Visited: 8/5/2003
Professor Li Fengting(third from left) of Shanghai's Tongji University has a discussion with local experts at the State Key Laboratory of Pollution Control and Resources Reuse.
The lab will be a training base for post-doctoral candidates from the six universities, according to Li Fengting, a professor with the College of UNEP (United Nations Environment Programme)-Tongji Environment and Sustainable Development group, who heads the lab.
Li said he and his fellow researchers and students will focus on such research subjects as urban development planning and ecological, environmental safety in Wanzhou, soil erosion control, building the reservoir water quality model, reservoir sediment and silt control and treatment - all possible problems that may arise from the dam construction.
The researchers will also be collecting basic data of the Three Gorges Reservoir, ranging from water and air quality to microscale organic matter.
Li said the institute will also welcome international partnership and collaboration from other universities in China to share resources and research findings.
Professor Li Fengting said that the effort to build a scientific survey and observation vessel has already been made by Tongji University and Germany's Juelich Research Centre.
If successful, the vessel will be able to cruise along the Three Gorges Reservoir area, and even along the whole Yangtze River late next year, Li said.
According to international researchers on the effect of dams upon the local ecosystems and biodiversity, inundation of the reservoir area may kill terrestrial plants and forests and displace some animals.Some unique wildlife which prefer valley grounds as their habitats may disappear.
Meanwhile, the loss of vegetation can lead to increases in sedimentation and stormflow and to decreases in water quality.
For this reason, Li and his colleagues will maintain on-site observation of the changes in the river ecosystem, and monitor water pollution and its impacts upon nature and local communities.
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Four other projects which are at the stage of soliciting funds are the research of vegetation and soil conditions in the allocated wild land; silt control; reuse of tangerine residue (after making tangerine juice); and the recycle and reuse of pig farm waste, according to Li Fengting.

