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Search Results (5,056)

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Keywords = agricultural ecological

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20 pages, 3001 KiB  
Article
Agroecosystem Modeling and Sustainable Optimization: An Empirical Study Based on XGBoost and EEBS Model
by Meiqing Xu, Zilong Yao, Yuxin Lu and Chunru Xiong
Sustainability 2025, 17(15), 7170; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17157170 (registering DOI) - 7 Aug 2025
Abstract
As agricultural land continues to expand, the conversion of forests to farmland has intensified, significantly altering the structure and function of agroecosystems. However, the dynamic ecological responses and their interactions with economic outcomes remain insufficiently modeled. This study proposes an integrated framework that [...] Read more.
As agricultural land continues to expand, the conversion of forests to farmland has intensified, significantly altering the structure and function of agroecosystems. However, the dynamic ecological responses and their interactions with economic outcomes remain insufficiently modeled. This study proposes an integrated framework that combines a dynamic food web model with the Eco-Economic Benefit and Sustainability (EEBS) model, utilizing empirical data from Brazil and Ghana. A system of ordinary differential equations solved using the fourth-order Runge–Kutta method was employed to simulate species interactions and energy flows under various land management strategies. Reintroducing key species (e.g., the seven-spot ladybird and ragweed) improved ecosystem stability to over 90%, with soil fertility recovery reaching 95%. In herbicide-free scenarios, introducing natural predators such as bats and birds mitigated disturbances and promoted ecological balance. Using XGBoost (Extreme Gradient Boosting) to analyze 200-day community dynamics, pest control, resource allocation, and chemical disturbance were identified as dominant drivers. EEBS-based multi-scenario optimization revealed that organic farming achieves the highest alignment between ecological restoration and economic benefits. The model demonstrated strong predictive power (R2 = 0.9619, RMSE = 0.0330), offering a quantitative basis for green agricultural transitions and sustainable agroecosystem management. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sustainable Agriculture)
18 pages, 3363 KiB  
Article
Spatial Heterogeneity of Heavy Metals in Arid Oasis Soils and Its Irrigation Input–Soil Nutrient Coupling Mechanism
by Jiang Liu, Chongbo Li, Jing Wang, Liangliang Li, Junling He and Funian Zhao
Sustainability 2025, 17(15), 7156; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17157156 (registering DOI) - 7 Aug 2025
Abstract
Soil environmental quality in arid oases is crucial for regional ecological security but faces multi-source heavy metal (HM) contamination risks. This study aimed to (1) characterize the spatial distribution of soil HMs (As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Hg, and Zn) in the Ka Shi [...] Read more.
Soil environmental quality in arid oases is crucial for regional ecological security but faces multi-source heavy metal (HM) contamination risks. This study aimed to (1) characterize the spatial distribution of soil HMs (As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Hg, and Zn) in the Ka Shi gar oasis, Xinjiang, (2) quantify the driving effect of irrigation water, and (3) elucidate interactions between HMs, soil properties, and land use types. Using 591 soil and 12 irrigation water samples, spatial patterns were mapped via inverse distance weighting interpolation, with drivers and interactions analyzed through correlation and land use comparisons. Results revealed significant spatial heterogeneity in HMs with no consistent regional trend: As peaked in arable land (5.27–40.20 μg/g) influenced by parent material and agriculture, Cd posed high ecological risk in gardens (max 0.29 μg/g), and Zn reached exceptional levels (412.00 μg/g) in gardens linked to industry/fertilizers. Irrigation water impacts were HM-specific: water contributed to soil As enrichment, whereas high water Cr did not elevate soil Cr (indicating industrial dominance), and Cd/Cu showed no significant link. Interactions with soil properties were regulated by land use: in arable land, As correlated positively with EC/TN and negatively with pH; in gardens, HMs generally decreased with pH, enhancing mobility risk; in forests, SOM adsorption immobilized HMs; in construction land, Hg correlated with SOM/TP, suggesting industrial-organic synergy. This study advances understanding by demonstrating that HM enrichment arises from natural and anthropogenic factors, with the spatial heterogeneity of irrigation water’s driving effect critically regulated by land use type, providing a spatially explicit basis for targeted pollution control and sustainable oasis management. Full article
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47 pages, 11661 KiB  
Article
Reintegrating Marginalized Rural Heritage: The Adaptive Potential of Barn Districts in Central Europe’s Cultural Landscapes
by Elżbieta Komarzyńska-Świeściak and Anna Alicja Wancel
Sustainability 2025, 17(15), 7166; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17157166 (registering DOI) - 7 Aug 2025
Abstract
Barn districts—ensembles of agricultural buildings situated at the edges of rural settlements—once played a key role in the spatial and economic organization of agrarian communities in Central Europe. Today, many of these structures remain marginalized and underexplored in contemporary landscape and heritage planning. [...] Read more.
Barn districts—ensembles of agricultural buildings situated at the edges of rural settlements—once played a key role in the spatial and economic organization of agrarian communities in Central Europe. Today, many of these structures remain marginalized and underexplored in contemporary landscape and heritage planning. This paper presents a comparative study of six barn districts in Poland’s Kraków-Częstochowa Upland, where vernacular construction, ecological adaptation, and local tradition shaped distinctive rural–urban interfaces. We applied a mixed-methods approach combining cartographic and archival analysis, field surveys, and interviews with residents and experts. The research reveals consistent patterns of landscape transformation, functional decline, and latent adaptive potential across varied morphological and material typologies. Despite differing levels of preservation, barn districts retain symbolic, spatial, and socio-cultural value for communities and local landscapes. The study emphasizes the importance of reintegrating these marginal heritage structures through adaptive reuse strategies rooted in the values of the New European Bauhaus—sustainability, aesthetics, and inclusion. The findings contribute to broader discussions on rural socio-ecological resilience and landscape-based development, highlighting how place-based strategies can bridge past identities with future-oriented spatial planning. Full article
21 pages, 510 KiB  
Review
IoT and Machine Learning for Smart Bird Monitoring and Repellence: Techniques, Challenges, and Opportunities
by Samson O. Ooko, Emmanuel Ndashimye, Evariste Twahirwa and Moise Busogi
IoT 2025, 6(3), 46; https://doi.org/10.3390/iot6030046 (registering DOI) - 7 Aug 2025
Abstract
The activities of birds present increasing challenges in agriculture, aviation, and environmental conservation. This has led to economic losses, safety risks, and ecological imbalances. Attempts have been made to address the problem, with traditional deterrent methods proving to be labour-intensive, environmentally unfriendly, and [...] Read more.
The activities of birds present increasing challenges in agriculture, aviation, and environmental conservation. This has led to economic losses, safety risks, and ecological imbalances. Attempts have been made to address the problem, with traditional deterrent methods proving to be labour-intensive, environmentally unfriendly, and ineffective over time. Advances in artificial intelligence (AI) and the Internet of Things (IoT) present opportunities for enabling automated real-time bird detection and repellence. This study reviews recent developments (2020–2025) in AI-driven bird detection and repellence systems, emphasising the integration of image, audio, and multi-sensor data in IoT and edge-based environments. The Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses framework was used, with 267 studies initially identified and screened from key scientific databases. A total of 154 studies met the inclusion criteria and were analysed. The findings show the increasing use of convolutional neural networks (CNNs), YOLO variants, and MobileNet in visual detection, and the growing use of lightweight audio-based models such as BirdNET, MFCC-based CNNs, and TinyML frameworks for microcontroller deployment. Multi-sensor fusion is proposed to improve detection accuracy in diverse environments. Repellence strategies include sound-based deterrents, visual deterrents, predator-mimicking visuals, and adaptive AI-integrated systems. Deployment success depends on edge compatibility, power efficiency, and dataset quality. The limitations of current studies include species-specific detection challenges, data scarcity, environmental changes, and energy constraints. Future research should focus on tiny and lightweight AI models, standardised multi-modal datasets, and intelligent, behaviour-aware deterrence mechanisms suitable for precision agriculture and ecological monitoring. Full article
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19 pages, 9248 KiB  
Article
Irrigation Suitability and Interaction Between Surface Water and Groundwater Influenced by Agriculture Activities in an Arid Plain of Central Asia
by Chenwei Tu, Wanrui Wang, Weihua Wang, Farong Huang, Minmin Gao, Yanchun Liu, Peiyao Gong and Yuan Yao
Agriculture 2025, 15(15), 1704; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture15151704 - 7 Aug 2025
Abstract
Agricultural activities and dry climatic conditions promote the evaporation and salinization of groundwater in arid areas. Long-term irrigation alters the groundwater circulation and environment in arid plains, as well as its hydraulic connection with surface water. A comprehensive assessment of groundwater irrigation suitability [...] Read more.
Agricultural activities and dry climatic conditions promote the evaporation and salinization of groundwater in arid areas. Long-term irrigation alters the groundwater circulation and environment in arid plains, as well as its hydraulic connection with surface water. A comprehensive assessment of groundwater irrigation suitability and its interaction with surface water is essential for water–ecology–agriculture security in arid areas. This study evaluates the irrigation water quality and groundwater–surface water interaction influenced by agricultural activities in a typical arid plain region using hydrochemical and stable isotopic data from 51 water samples. The results reveal that the area of cultivated land increases by 658.9 km2 from 2000 to 2023, predominantly resulting from the conversion of bare land. Groundwater TDS (total dissolved solids) value exhibits significant spatial heterogeneity, ranging from 516 to 2684 mg/L. Cl, SO42−, and Na+ are the dominant ions in groundwater, with a widespread distribution of brackish water. Groundwater δ18O values range from −9.4‰ to −5.4‰, with the mean value close to surface water. In total, 86% of the surface water samples are good and suitable for agricultural irrigation, while 60% of shallow groundwater samples are marginally suitable or unsuitable for irrigation at present. Groundwater hydrochemistry is largely controlled by intensive evaporation, water–rock interaction, and agricultural activities (e.g., cultivated land expansion, irrigation, groundwater exploitation, and fertilizers). Agricultural activities could cause shallow groundwater salinization, even confined water deterioration, with an intense and frequent exchange between groundwater and surface water. In order to sustainably manage groundwater and maintain ecosystem stability in arid plain regions, controlling cultivated land area and irrigation water amount, enhancing water utilization efficiency, limiting groundwater exploitation, and fully utilizing floodwater resources would be the viable ways. The findings will help to deepen the understanding of the groundwater quality evolution mechanism in arid irrigated regions and also provide a scientific basis for agricultural water management in the context of extreme climatic events and anthropogenic activities. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Agricultural Water Management)
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15 pages, 771 KiB  
Review
Trichoderma: Dual Roles in Biocontrol and Plant Growth Promotion
by Xiaoyan Chen, Yuntong Lu, Xing Liu, Yunying Gu and Fei Li
Microorganisms 2025, 13(8), 1840; https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms13081840 - 7 Aug 2025
Abstract
The genus Trichoderma plays a pivotal role in sustainable agriculture through its multifaceted contributions to plant health and productivity. This review explores Trichoderma’s biological functions, including its roles as a biocontrol agent, plant growth promoter, and stress resilience enhancer. By producing various [...] Read more.
The genus Trichoderma plays a pivotal role in sustainable agriculture through its multifaceted contributions to plant health and productivity. This review explores Trichoderma’s biological functions, including its roles as a biocontrol agent, plant growth promoter, and stress resilience enhancer. By producing various enzymes, secondary metabolites, and volatile organic compounds, Trichoderma effectively suppresses plant pathogens, promotes root development, and primes plant immune responses. This review details the evolutionary adaptations of Trichoderma, which has transitioned from saprotrophism to mycoparasitism and established beneficial symbiotic relationships with plants. It also highlights the ecological versatility of Trichoderma in colonizing plant roots and improving soil health, while emphasizing its role in mitigating both biotic and abiotic stressors. With increasing recognition as a biostimulant and biocontrol agent, Trichoderma has become a key player in reducing chemical inputs and advancing eco-friendly farming practices. This review addresses challenges such as strain selection, formulation stability, and regulatory hurdles and concludes by advocating for continued research to optimize Trichoderma’s applications in addressing climate change, enhancing food security, and promoting a sustainable agricultural future. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Plant–Soil–Microbe Interactions)
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21 pages, 4581 KiB  
Article
Spatiotemporal Variations and Drivers of the Ecological Footprint of Water Resources in the Yangtze River Delta
by Aimin Chen, Lina Chang, Peng Zhao, Xianbin Sun, Guangsheng Zhang, Yuanping Li, Haojun Deng and Xiaoqin Wen
Water 2025, 17(15), 2340; https://doi.org/10.3390/w17152340 - 6 Aug 2025
Abstract
With the acceleration of urbanization in China, water resources have become a key factor restricting regional sustainable development. Current research primarily examines the temporal or spatial variations in the water resources ecological footprint (WREF), with limited emphasis on the integration of both spatial [...] Read more.
With the acceleration of urbanization in China, water resources have become a key factor restricting regional sustainable development. Current research primarily examines the temporal or spatial variations in the water resources ecological footprint (WREF), with limited emphasis on the integration of both spatial and temporal scales. In this study, we collected the data and information from the 2005–2022 Statistical Yearbook and Water Resources Bulletin of the Yangtze River Delta Urban Agglomeration (YRDUA), and calculated evaluation indicators: WREF, water resources ecological carrying capacity (WRECC), water resources ecological pressure (WREP), and water resources ecological surplus and deficit (WRESD). We primarily analyzed the temporal and spatial variation in the per capita WREF and used the method of Geodetector to explore factors driving its temporal and spatial variation in the YRDUA. The results showed that: (1) From 2005 to 2022, the per capita WREF (total water, agricultural water, and industrial water) of the YRDUA generally showed fluctuating declining trends, while the per capita WREF of domestic water and ecological water showed obvious growth. (2) The per capita WREF and the per capita WRECC were in the order of Jiangsu Province > Anhui Province > Shanghai City > Zhejiang Province. The spatial distribution of the per capita WREF was similar to those of the per capita WRECC, and most areas effectively consume water resources. (3) The explanatory power of the interaction between factors was greater than that of a single factor, indicating that the spatiotemporal variation in the per capita WREF of the YRDUA was affected by the combination of multiple factors and that there were regional differences in the major factors in the case of secondary metropolitan areas. (4) The per capita WREF of YRDUA was affected by natural resources, and the impact of the ecological condition on the per capita WREF increased gradually over time. The impact factors of secondary metropolitan areas also clearly changed over time. Our results showed that the ecological situation of per capita water resources in the YRDUA is generally good, with obvious spatial and temporal differences. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Water Resources Management, Policy and Governance)
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20 pages, 1014 KiB  
Review
State of the Art on the Interaction of Entomopathogenic Nematodes and Plant Growth-Promoting Rhizobacteria to Innovate a Sustainable Plant Health Product
by Islam Ahmed Abdelalim Darwish, Daniel P. Martins, David Ryan and Thomais Kakouli-Duarte
Crops 2025, 5(4), 52; https://doi.org/10.3390/crops5040052 - 6 Aug 2025
Abstract
Insect pests cause severe damage and yield losses to many agricultural crops globally. The use of chemical pesticides on agricultural crops is not recommended because of their toxic effects on the environment and consumers. In addition, pesticide toxicity reduces soil fertility, poisons ground [...] Read more.
Insect pests cause severe damage and yield losses to many agricultural crops globally. The use of chemical pesticides on agricultural crops is not recommended because of their toxic effects on the environment and consumers. In addition, pesticide toxicity reduces soil fertility, poisons ground waters, and is hazardous to soil biota. Therefore, applications of entomopathogenic nematodes (EPNs) and plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) are an alternative, eco-friendly solution to chemical pesticides and mineral-based fertilizers to enhance plant health and promote sustainable food security. This review focuses on the biological and ecological aspects of these organisms while also highlighting the practical application of molecular communication approaches in developing a novel plant health product. This insight will support this innovative approach that combines PGPR and EPNs for sustainable crop production. Several studies have reported positive interactions between nematodes and bacteria. Although the combined presence of both organisms has been shown to promote plant growth, the molecular interactions between them are still under investigation. Integrating molecular communication studies in the development of a new product could help in understanding their relationships and, in turn, support the combination of these organisms into a single plant health product. Full article
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20 pages, 2088 KiB  
Article
Sustainable Soil Management in Reservoir Riparian Zones: Impacts of Long-Term Water Level Fluctuations on Aggregate Stability and Land Degradation in Southwestern China
by Pengcheng Wang, Zexi Song, Henglin Xiao and Gaoliang Tao
Sustainability 2025, 17(15), 7141; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17157141 - 6 Aug 2025
Abstract
Soil structural instability in reservoir riparian zones, induced by water level fluctuations, threatens sustainable land use by accelerating land degradation. This study examined the impact of water-level variations on soil aggregate composition and stability based on key indicators, including water-stable aggregate content (WSAC), [...] Read more.
Soil structural instability in reservoir riparian zones, induced by water level fluctuations, threatens sustainable land use by accelerating land degradation. This study examined the impact of water-level variations on soil aggregate composition and stability based on key indicators, including water-stable aggregate content (WSAC), mean weight diameter (MWD), and geometric mean diameter (GMD). The Savinov dry sieving, Yoder wet sieving, and Le Bissonnais (LB) methods were employed for analysis. Results indicated that, with decreasing water levels and increasing soil layer, aggregates larger than 5 mm decreased, while aggregates smaller than 0.25 mm increased. Rising water levels and increasing soil layer corresponded to reductions in soil stability indicators (MWD, GMD, and WSAC), highlighting a trend toward soil structural instability. The LB method revealed the lowest aggregate stability under rapid wetting and the highest under slow wetting conditions. Correlation analysis showed that soil organic matter positively correlated with the relative mechanical breakdown index (RMI) (p < 0.05) and negatively correlated with the relative slaking index (RSI), whereas soil pH was negatively correlated with both RMI and RSI (p < 0.05). Comparative analysis of aggregate stability methods demonstrated that results from the dry sieving method closely resembled those from the SW treatment of the LB method, whereas the wet sieving method closely aligned with the FW (Fast Wetting) treatment of the LB method. The Le Bissonnais method not only reflected the outcomes of dry and wet sieving methods but also effectively distinguished the mechanisms of aggregate breakdown. The study concluded that prolonged flooding intensified aggregate dispersion, with mechanical breakdown influenced by water levels and soil layer. Dispersion and mechanical breakdown represent primary mechanisms of soil aggregate instability, further exacerbated by fluctuating water levels. By elucidating degradation mechanisms, this research provides actionable insights for preserving soil health, safeguarding water resources, and promoting sustainable agricultural in ecologically vulnerable reservoir regions of the Yangtze River Basin. Full article
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16 pages, 2576 KiB  
Article
Modeling and Spatiotemporal Analysis of Actual Evapotranspiration in a Desert Steppe Based on SEBS
by Yanlin Feng, Lixia Wang, Chunwei Liu, Baozhong Zhang, Jun Wang, Pei Zhang and Ranghui Wang
Hydrology 2025, 12(8), 205; https://doi.org/10.3390/hydrology12080205 - 6 Aug 2025
Abstract
Accurate estimation of actual evapotranspiration (ET) is critical for understanding hydrothermal cycles and ecosystem functioning in arid regions, where water scarcity governs ecological resilience. To address persistent gaps in ET quantification, this study integrates multi-source remote sensing data, energy balance modeling, and ground-based [...] Read more.
Accurate estimation of actual evapotranspiration (ET) is critical for understanding hydrothermal cycles and ecosystem functioning in arid regions, where water scarcity governs ecological resilience. To address persistent gaps in ET quantification, this study integrates multi-source remote sensing data, energy balance modeling, and ground-based validation that significantly enhances spatiotemporal ET accuracy in the vulnerable desert steppe ecosystems. The study utilized meteorological data from several national stations and Landsat-8 imagery to process monthly remote sensing images in 2019. The Surface Energy Balance System (SEBS) model, chosen for its ability to estimate ET over large areas, was applied to derive modeled daily ET values, which were validated by a large-weighted lysimeter. It was shown that ET varied seasonally, peaking in July at 6.40 mm/day, and reaching a minimum value in winter with 1.83 mm/day in December. ET was significantly higher in southern regions compared to central and northern areas. SEBS-derived ET showed strong agreement with lysimeter measurements, with a mean relative error of 4.30%, which also consistently outperformed MOD16A2 ET products in accuracy. This spatial heterogeneity was driven by greater vegetation coverage and enhanced precipitation in the southeast. The steppe ET showed a strong positive correlation with surface temperatures and vegetation density. Moreover, the precipitation gradients and land use were primary controllers of spatial ET patterns. The process-based SEBS frameworks demonstrate dual functionality as resource-optimized computational platforms while enabling multi-scale quantification of ET spatiotemporal heterogeneity; it was therefore a reliable tool for ecohydrological assessments in an arid steppe, providing critical insights for water resource management and drought monitoring. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Hydrological and Hydrodynamic Processes and Modelling)
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24 pages, 62899 KiB  
Essay
Monitoring and Historical Spatio-Temporal Analysis of Arable Land Non-Agriculturalization in Dachang County, Eastern China Based on Time-Series Remote Sensing Imagery
by Boyuan Li, Na Lin, Xian Zhang, Chun Wang, Kai Yang, Kai Ding and Bin Wang
Earth 2025, 6(3), 91; https://doi.org/10.3390/earth6030091 - 6 Aug 2025
Abstract
The phenomenon of arable land non-agriculturalization has become increasingly severe, posing significant threats to the security of arable land resources and ecological sustainability. This study focuses on Dachang Hui Autonomous County in Langfang City, Hebei Province, a region located at the edge of [...] Read more.
The phenomenon of arable land non-agriculturalization has become increasingly severe, posing significant threats to the security of arable land resources and ecological sustainability. This study focuses on Dachang Hui Autonomous County in Langfang City, Hebei Province, a region located at the edge of the Beijing–Tianjin–Hebei metropolitan cluster. In recent years, the area has undergone accelerated urbanization and industrial transfer, resulting in drastic land use changes and a pronounced contradiction between arable land protection and the expansion of construction land. The study period is 2016–2023, which covers the key period of the Beijing–Tianjin–Hebei synergistic development strategy and the strengthening of the national arable land protection policy, and is able to comprehensively reflect the dynamic changes of arable land non-agriculturalization under the policy and urbanization process. Multi-temporal Sentinel-2 imagery was utilized to construct a multi-dimensional feature set, and machine learning classifiers were applied to identify arable land non-agriculturalization with optimized performance. GIS-based analysis and the geographic detector model were employed to reveal the spatio-temporal dynamics and driving mechanisms. The results demonstrate that the XGBoost model, optimized using Bayesian parameter tuning, achieved the highest classification accuracy (overall accuracy = 0.94) among the four classifiers, indicating its superior suitability for identifying arable land non-agriculturalization using multi-temporal remote sensing imagery. Spatio-temporal analysis revealed that non-agriculturalization expanded rapidly between 2016 and 2020, followed by a deceleration after 2020, exhibiting a pattern of “rapid growth–slowing down–partial regression”. Further analysis using the geographic detector revealed that socioeconomic factors are the primary drivers of arable land non-agriculturalization in Dachang Hui Autonomous County, while natural factors exerted relatively weaker effects. These findings provide technical support and scientific evidence for dynamic monitoring and policy formulation regarding arable land under urbanization, offering significant theoretical and practical implications. Full article
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18 pages, 11555 KiB  
Article
Impacts of Land Use and Hydrological Regime on the Spatiotemporal Distribution of Ecosystem Services in a Large Yangtze River-Connected Lake Region
by Ying Huang, Xinsheng Chen, Ying Zhuo and Lianlian Zhu
Water 2025, 17(15), 2337; https://doi.org/10.3390/w17152337 - 6 Aug 2025
Abstract
In river-connected lake regions, both land use and hydrological regime changes may affect the ecosystem services; however, few studies have attempted to elucidate their complex influences. In this study, the spatiotemporal dynamics of eight ecosystem services (crop production, aquatic production, water yield, soil [...] Read more.
In river-connected lake regions, both land use and hydrological regime changes may affect the ecosystem services; however, few studies have attempted to elucidate their complex influences. In this study, the spatiotemporal dynamics of eight ecosystem services (crop production, aquatic production, water yield, soil retention, flood regulation, water purification, net primary productivity, and habitat quality) were investigated through remote-sensing images and the InVEST model in the Dongting Lake Region during 2000–2020. Results revealed that crop and aquatic production increased significantly from 2000 to 2020, particularly in the northwestern and central regions, while soil retention and net primary productivity also improved. However, flood regulation, water purification, and habitat quality decreased, with the fastest decline in habitat quality occurring at the periphery of the Dongting Lake. Land-use types accounted for 63.3%, 53.8%, and 40.3% of spatial heterogeneity in habitat quality, flood regulation, and water purification, respectively. Land-use changes, particularly the expansion of construction land and the conversion of water bodies to cropland, led to a sharp decline in soil retention, flood regulation, water purification, net primary productivity, and habitat quality. In addition, crop production and aquatic production were higher in cultivated land and residential land, while the accompanying degradation of flood regulation, water purification, and habitat quality formed a “production-pollution-degradation” spatial coupling pattern. Furthermore, hydrological fluctuations further complicated these dynamics; wet years amplified agricultural outputs but intensified ecological degradation through spatial spillover effects. These findings underscore the need for integrated land-use and hydrological management strategies that balance human livelihoods with ecosystem resilience. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Ecohydrology)
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22 pages, 10285 KiB  
Article
Biophysical and Social Constraints of Restoring Ecosystem Services in the Border Regions of Tibet, China
by Lizhi Jia, Silin Liu, Xinjie Zha and Ting Hua
Land 2025, 14(8), 1601; https://doi.org/10.3390/land14081601 - 6 Aug 2025
Abstract
Ecosystem restoration represents a promising solution for enhancing ecosystem services and environmental sustainability. However, border regions—characterized by ecological fragility and geopolitical complexity—remain underrepresented in ecosystem service and restoration research. To fill this gap, we coupled spatially explicit models (e.g., InVEST and RUSLE) with [...] Read more.
Ecosystem restoration represents a promising solution for enhancing ecosystem services and environmental sustainability. However, border regions—characterized by ecological fragility and geopolitical complexity—remain underrepresented in ecosystem service and restoration research. To fill this gap, we coupled spatially explicit models (e.g., InVEST and RUSLE) with scenario analysis to quantify the ecosystem service potential that could be achieved in China’s Tibetan borderlands under two interacting agendas: ecological restoration and border-strengthening policies. Restoration feasibility was evaluated through combining local biophysical constraints, economic viability (via restoration-induced carbon gains vs. opportunity costs), operational practicality, and simulated infrastructure expansion. The results showed that per-unit-area ecosystem services in border counties (particularly Medog, Cona, and Zayu) exceed that of interior Tibet by a factor of two to four. Combining these various constraints, approximately 4–17% of the border zone remains cost-effective for grassland or forest restoration. Under low carbon pricing (US$10 t−1 CO2), the carbon revenue generated through restoration is insufficient to offset the opportunity cost of agricultural production, constituting a major constraint. Habitat quality, soil conservation, and carbon sequestration increase modestly when induced by restoration, but a pronounced carbon–water trade-off emerges. Planned infrastructure reduces restoration benefits only slightly, whereas raising the carbon price to about US$50 t−1 CO2 substantially expands such benefits. These findings highlight both the opportunities and limits of ecosystem restoration in border regions and point to carbon pricing as the key policy lever for unlocking cost-effective restoration. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue The Role of Land Policy in Shaping Rural Development Outcomes)
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22 pages, 7171 KiB  
Article
Distribution Characteristics, Mobility, and Influencing Factors of Heavy Metals at the Sediment–Water Interface in South Dongting Lake
by Xiaohong Fang, Xiangyu Han, Chuanyong Tang, Bo Peng, Qing Peng, Linjie Hu, Yuru Zhong and Shana Shi
Water 2025, 17(15), 2331; https://doi.org/10.3390/w17152331 - 5 Aug 2025
Abstract
South Dongting Lake is an essential aquatic ecosystem that receives substantial water inflows from the Xiangjiang and Zishui Rivers. However, it is significantly impacted by human activities, including mining, smelting, and farming. These activities have led to serious contamination of the lake’s sediments [...] Read more.
South Dongting Lake is an essential aquatic ecosystem that receives substantial water inflows from the Xiangjiang and Zishui Rivers. However, it is significantly impacted by human activities, including mining, smelting, and farming. These activities have led to serious contamination of the lake’s sediments with heavy metals (HMs). This study investigated the distribution, mobility, and influencing factors of HMs at the sediment–water interface. To this end, sediment samples were analyzed from three key regions (Xiangjiang River estuary, Zishui River estuary, and northeastern South Dongting Lake) using traditional sampling methods and Diffusive Gradients in Thin Films (DGT) technology. Analysis of fifteen HMs (Pb, Bi, Ni, As, Se, Cd, Sb, Mn, Zn, V, Cr, Cu, Tl, Co, and Fe) revealed significant spatial heterogeneity. The results showed that Cr, Cu, Pb, Bi, Ni, As, Se, Cd, Sb, Mn, Zn, and Fe exhibited high variability (CV > 0.20), whereas V, Tl, and Co demonstrated stable concentrations (CV < 0.20). Concentrations were found to exceed background values of the upper continental crust of eastern China (UCC), Yangtze River sediments (YZ), and Dongting Lake sediments (DT), particularly at the Xiangjiang estuary (XE) and in the northeastern regions. Speciation analysis revealed that V, Cr, Cu, Ni, and As were predominantly found in the residual fraction (F4), while Pb and Co were concentrated in the oxidizable fraction (F3), Mn and Zn appeared primarily in the exchangeable fractions (F1 and F2), and Cd was notably dominant in the exchangeable fraction (F1), suggesting a high potential for mobility. Additionally, DGT results confirmed a significant potential for the release of Pb, Zn, and Cd. Contamination assessment using the Pollution Load Index (PLI) and Geoaccumulation Index (Igeo) identified Pb, Bi, Ni, As, Se, Cd, and Sb as major pollutants. Among these, Bi and Cd were found to pose the highest risks. Furthermore, the Risk Assessment Code (RAC) and the Potential Ecological Risk Index (PERI) highlighted Cd as the primary ecological risk contributor, especially in the XE. The study identified sediment grain size, pH, electrical conductivity, and nutrient levels as the primary influencing factors. The PMF modeling revealed HM sources as mixed smelting/natural inputs, agricultural activities, natural weathering, and mining/smelting operations, suggesting that remediation should prioritize Cd control in the XE with emphasis on external inputs. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Water Quality and Contamination)
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18 pages, 2357 KiB  
Article
Nitrogen Fertilizer Reduction in Rice–Eel Co-Culture System Improves the Soil Microbial Diversity and Its Functional Stability
by Mengqian Ma, Weiguang Lv, Yu Huang, Juanqin Zhang, Shuangxi Li, Naling Bai, Haiyun Zhang, Xianpu Zhu, Chenglong Xu and Hanlin Zhang
Plants 2025, 14(15), 2425; https://doi.org/10.3390/plants14152425 - 5 Aug 2025
Abstract
The ecological rice–eel co-culture system is not only beneficial for enhancing productivity and sustainability in agriculture but also plays a crucial role in promoting environmental health. In the present study, based on the long-term positioning trial of the rice–eel co-culture system that began [...] Read more.
The ecological rice–eel co-culture system is not only beneficial for enhancing productivity and sustainability in agriculture but also plays a crucial role in promoting environmental health. In the present study, based on the long-term positioning trial of the rice–eel co-culture system that began in 2016 and was sampled in 2023, the effects of reduced nitrogen fertilizer application on soil physico-chemical properties and the bacterial community were investigated. Treatments included a conventional regular fertilization treatment (RT), rice–eel co-culture system regular fertilization (IT), and nitrogen-reduction 10%, 30%, and 50% fertilization treatments (IT90, IT70, and IT50). Our research demonstrated the following: (1) Compared to RT, IT significantly increased soil water-stable macroaggregates (R0.25), mean weight diameter (MWD), geometric mean diameter (GMD), and available phosphorus content, with the increases of 15.66%, 25.49%, 36.00%, and 18.42%, respectively. Among the nitrogen-reduction fertilization treatments, IT90 showed the most significant effect. Compared to IT, IT90 significantly increased R0.25, MWD, GMD, and available nitrogen content, with increases of 4.4%, 7.81%, 8.82%, and 28.89%, respectively. (2) Compared to RT, at the phylum level, the diversity of Chloroflexi was significantly increased under IT and IT50, and the diversity of Gemmatimonadota was significantly increased under IT90, IT70, and IT50. The diversity of Acidobacteriota was significantly higher in IT90 and IT70 compared to IT. It was shown that the rice–eel co-culture system and nitrogen fertilizer reduction could effectively improve the degradation capacity of organic matter and promote soil nitrogen cycling. In addition, redundancy analysis (RDA) identified total phosphorus, total nitrogen, and available nitrogen (p = 0.007) as the three most important environmental factors driving changes in the bacterial community. (3) The functional prediction analysis of soil microbiota showed that, compared to RT, the diversity of pathways related to biosynthesis (carbohydrate biosynthesis and cell structure biosynthesis) and metabolism (L-glutamate and L-glutamine biosynthesis) was significantly higher under IT70, IT90, IT, and IT50 (in descending order). However, the diversity of pathways associated with degradation/utilization/assimilation (secondary metabolite degradation and amine and polyamine degradation) was significantly lower under all the rice–eel co-culture treatments. In conclusion, the rice–eel co-culture system improved soil physicochemical properties and the soil microbial environment compared with conventional planting, and the best soil improvement was achieved with 10% less N fertilizer application. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Chemical Properties of Soils and its Impact on Plant Growth)
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