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Search Results (1,541)

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29 pages, 3448 KB  
Article
Drivers of Carbon Emission Efficiency in the Construction Industry: Evidence from the Yangtze River Economic Belt
by Min Chen, Shuqi Fan, Yuan Gao, Vishwa Akalanka Udaya Bandara Konara Mudiyanselage and Lili Zhang
Buildings 2026, 16(2), 384; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16020384 - 16 Jan 2026
Abstract
Carbon emission reduction in the construction industry is pivotal for global carbon emission reduction, yet the lack of coordination mechanisms within the sector limits its effectiveness. This study examines the Yangtze River Economic Belt from 2010 to 2022, capturing the spatial and temporal [...] Read more.
Carbon emission reduction in the construction industry is pivotal for global carbon emission reduction, yet the lack of coordination mechanisms within the sector limits its effectiveness. This study examines the Yangtze River Economic Belt from 2010 to 2022, capturing the spatial and temporal evolution characteristics and key influencing factors of carbon emission efficiency in the construction industry (CEECI) to achieve coordinated emission reduction. Using the super-efficiency Slack-Based Measure (SBM) model and the Malmquist–Luenberger (ML) index, the study analyzes changes in CEECI, revealing significant regional variations: downstream, midstream, and upstream regions demonstrated average values of 1.10, 1.00, and 0.68, respectively. Resource redundancy is a major issue affecting CEECI, with energy redundancy rates exceeding 20%. The ML index indicates continuous improvement in CEECI, with technological change (TC) contributing the most to this improvement, as shown by index decomposition. Spatial analysis using Moran’s index (Moran’s I) revealed significant positive spatial autocorrelation, with distinct “high-high” (H-H) and “low-low” (L-L) clustering patterns, suggesting that regions with high CEECI positively influence their neighbors. Finally, we built a spatial econometric model to identify key influencing factors, including industrialization level, construction industry production level, energy consumption structure, human resources, and internal innovation levels, which directly or indirectly impact CEECI to varying degrees. These findings highlight the importance of regional coordination and targeted policy interventions to enhance carbon emission efficiency in the construction industry, addressing resource redundancy and leveraging technological advancements to contribute to global carbon reduction goals. Full article
26 pages, 5996 KB  
Article
Spatiotemporal Wind Speed Changes Along the Yangtze River Waterway (1979–2018)
by Lei Bai, Ming Shang, Chenxiao Shi, Yao Bian, Lilun Liu, Junbin Zhang and Qian Li
Atmosphere 2026, 17(1), 81; https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos17010081 - 14 Jan 2026
Viewed by 25
Abstract
Long-term wind speed changes over the Yangtze River waterway have critical implications for inland shipping efficiency, emission dispersion, and renewable energy potential. This study utilizes a high-resolution 5 km gridded reanalysis dataset spanning 1979–2018 to conduct a comprehensive spatiotemporal analysis of surface wind [...] Read more.
Long-term wind speed changes over the Yangtze River waterway have critical implications for inland shipping efficiency, emission dispersion, and renewable energy potential. This study utilizes a high-resolution 5 km gridded reanalysis dataset spanning 1979–2018 to conduct a comprehensive spatiotemporal analysis of surface wind climatology, variability, and trends along China’s primary inland waterway. A pivotal regime shift was identified around 2000, marking a transition from terrestrial stilling to a recovery phase characterized by wind speed intensification. Multiple change-point detection algorithms consistently identify 2000 as a pivotal turning point, marking a transition from the late 20th century “terrestrial stilling” to a recovery phase characterized by wind speed intensification. Post-2000 trends reveal pronounced spatial heterogeneity: the upstream section exhibits sustained strengthening (+0.02 m/s per decade, p = 0.03), the midstream shows weak or non-significant trends with localized afternoon stilling in complex terrain (−0.08 m/s per decade), while the downstream coastal zone demonstrates robust intensification exceeding +0.10 m/s per decade during spring–autumn daytime hours. Three distinct wind regimes emerge along the 3000 km corridor: a high-energy maritime-influenced downstream sector (annual means > 3.9 m/s, diurnal peaks > 6.0 m/s) dominated by sea breeze circulation, a transitional midstream zone (2.3–2.7 m/s) exhibiting bimodal spatial structure and unique summer-afternoon thermal enhancement, and a topographically suppressed upstream region (<2.0 m/s) punctuated by pronounced channeling effects through the Three Gorges constriction. Critically, the observed recovery contradicts widespread basin greening (97.9% of points showing significant positive NDVI trends), which theoretically should enhance surface roughness and suppress wind speeds. Correlation analysis reveals that wind variability is systematically controlled by large-scale atmospheric circulation patterns, including the Northern Hemisphere Polar Vortex (r ≈ 0.35), Western Pacific Subtropical High (r ≈ 0.38), and East Asian monsoon systems (r > 0.60), with distinct seasonal phase-locking between baroclinic spring dynamics and monsoon-thermal summer forcing. These findings establish a comprehensive, fine-scale climatological baseline essential for optimizing pollutant dispersion modeling, and evaluating wind-assisted propulsion feasibility to support shipping decarbonization goals along the Yangtze Waterway. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Meteorology)
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24 pages, 8070 KB  
Article
Research on Ecological Compensation in the Yangtze River Economic Belt Based on Water-Energy-Food Service Flows and XGBoost-SHAP Analysis
by Hao Wang, Jianshen Qu, Weidong Zhang, Peizhen Zhu, Ruoqing Zhu, Yuexia Han, Yong Cao and Bin Dong
Sustainability 2026, 18(2), 839; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18020839 - 14 Jan 2026
Viewed by 41
Abstract
Under the combined influence of global climate change and intensified human activities, quantifying ecological compensation (EC) amounts between regions and formulating scientifically sound and rational policies have become critical strategies for addressing the imbalance between economic development and ecological conservation. This study focuses [...] Read more.
Under the combined influence of global climate change and intensified human activities, quantifying ecological compensation (EC) amounts between regions and formulating scientifically sound and rational policies have become critical strategies for addressing the imbalance between economic development and ecological conservation. This study focuses on the Yangtze River Economic Belt (YREB) as the research subject, assesses ecosystem service supply and demand (ESSD) in the years 2000, 2010, and 2020 from the perspective of the water-energy-food nexus (WEF-Nexus), identifies ecosystem service flows (ESF) between supply and demand areas, develops an integrated EC model incorporating ecological, economic, and social dimensions to estimate EC amounts, and ultimately employs the XGBoost-SHAP model to analyze the underlying driving mechanisms. The results indicate the following: (1) From 2000 to 2020, the spatio-temporal variations in the three ESSDs in the YREB were substantial. Additionally, imbalances in ESSDs were observed, predominantly in economically advanced regions. (2) A total of 183 ESFs were identified among cities within the YREB, reflecting relatively active exchanges of ecosystem services (ESs). (3) Over the past two decades, the average annual total EC of the YREB amounted to 46,866.35 million yuan, with EC capital flows occurring in 117 cities. The proportion of water area in each city constitutes the primary driver of the EC amount. The EC model based on the “water-energy-food” ecosystem service flow (WEF-ESF) proposed in this study provides a valuable reference and scientific basis for formulating EC policies among YREB cities. Full article
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68 pages, 50220 KB  
Review
Alkali-Activated Materials and CDW for the Development of Sustainable Building Materials: A Review with a Special Focus on Their Mechanical Properties
by Luca Baldazzi, Andrea Saccani and Stefania Manzi
Buildings 2026, 16(2), 309; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16020309 - 11 Jan 2026
Viewed by 75
Abstract
Alkali-activated materials (AAMs) or geopolymers have been considered for many years as a sustainable substitution for the traditional ordinary Portland cement (OPC) binder. However, their production needs energy consumption and creates carbon emissions. Since construction and demolition waste (CDW) can become precursors for [...] Read more.
Alkali-activated materials (AAMs) or geopolymers have been considered for many years as a sustainable substitution for the traditional ordinary Portland cement (OPC) binder. However, their production needs energy consumption and creates carbon emissions. Since construction and demolition waste (CDW) can become precursors for manufacturing alkali-activated materials, their use as substitutes for traditional AAM (such as metakaolin, blast furnace slag, and fly ash) can solve both the problem of their disposal and the problem of sustainability. Furthermore, CDW can also be used as aggregate replacement, avoiding the exploitation of natural river sand and gravel. A new circular economy could be created based on CDW recycling, creating a new eco-friendly building practice. Unfortunately, this process is quite difficult owing to several variables that should be taken into consideration, such as the possibility of separating and sorting the CDW, the great variability of CDW composition, the cost of the mechanical and thermal treatment, the different parameters that compose an alkali-activated mix-design, and public opinion still being skeptical about the use of recycled materials in the construction sector. This review tries to describe all these aspects, summarizing the results of the most interesting studies performed on this subject. Today, thanks to a comprehensive protocol, the use of building information modeling (BIM) software and machine learning models, a large-scale reuse of CDW in the building industry appears more feasible. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Innovations in Building Materials and Infrastructure Design)
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20 pages, 2618 KB  
Article
Exploring the Residents’ Perceptions of Ecosystem Services and Disservices in Three-River-Source National Park
by Aiqing Li, Huaju Xue, Yanqin Wang, Xiaofen Wang and Jinhe Zhang
Land 2026, 15(1), 148; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15010148 - 11 Jan 2026
Viewed by 162
Abstract
Understanding residents’ perceptions of ecosystem services (ES) and ecosystem disservices (EDS) is crucial for protected areas governance. This study, conducted in China’s Three-River-Source National Park (TNP), employed participatory rural appraisal and household questionnaires to examine local cognitive patterns of ES and EDS, along [...] Read more.
Understanding residents’ perceptions of ecosystem services (ES) and ecosystem disservices (EDS) is crucial for protected areas governance. This study, conducted in China’s Three-River-Source National Park (TNP), employed participatory rural appraisal and household questionnaires to examine local cognitive patterns of ES and EDS, along with their socio-spatial heterogeneity and perceived synergies and trade-offs among them. The key findings are as follows: (1) Cultural services received the highest scores, followed by regulating services, whereas provisioning services, especially food provisioning, were rated as relatively inadequate. Safety threats were considered the most severe EDS. Overall, a Matthew Effect emerged: services with high current perception scores showed an improving trend, while those with low scores deteriorated. (2) Spatially, ES/EDS evaluation scores exhibited a “core zone < general control zone < peripheral zone” gradient. Socio-demographic and economic factors also influenced residents’ perceptions; women and the elderly were especially more concerned about food and energy supply shortages and safety issues. (3) The relationships among the various ES and EDS are primarily synergistic rather than trade-offs. Specifically, gains in regulating services were associated with enhanced cultural services, while declines in provisioning services and intensified safety threats coincided with the deterioration of material EDS. These findings offer a scientific basis for managing protected areas in high-altitude, ecologically fragile regions and provide practical insights for balancing ecological conservation with community development. Full article
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24 pages, 1677 KB  
Article
Forestry Green Development Efficiency in China’s Yellow River Basin: Evidence from the Super-SBM Model and the Global Malmquist-Luenberger Index
by Yu Li, Longzhen Ni, Wenhui Chen, Yibai Wang and Dongzhuo Xie
Land 2026, 15(1), 147; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15010147 - 10 Jan 2026
Viewed by 158
Abstract
The Yellow River Basin (YRB), a typical river system facing the challenge of balancing ecological conservation and economic development, offers valuable insights for global sustainable watershed governance through its forestry green transformation. Based on panel data from nine provinces in the basin from [...] Read more.
The Yellow River Basin (YRB), a typical river system facing the challenge of balancing ecological conservation and economic development, offers valuable insights for global sustainable watershed governance through its forestry green transformation. Based on panel data from nine provinces in the basin from 2005 to 2022, this study constructs an efficiency evaluation indicator system for forestry green development. This system incorporates four inputs (labor, land, capital, and energy), two desirable outputs (economic and ecological benefits), and three undesirable outputs (wastewater, waste gas, and solid waste). By systematically integrating the undesirable outputs-based super-SBM model and the global Malmquist–Luenberger (GML) index, this study provides an assessment from both static and dynamic perspectives. The findings are as follows. (1) Forestry green development efficiency showed fluctuations over the study period, with the basin-wide average remaining below the production frontier. Spatially, it exhibits a pattern of “downstream > upstream > midstream”. (2) The average GML index is 0.984 during the study period, representing an average annual decline in forestry green total factor productivity of 1.6%. The growth dynamics transitioned from a stage dominated solely by technological progress to a dual-driver model involving both technological progress and technical efficiency. (3) The drivers of forestry green total factor productivity growth in the basin show profound regional heterogeneity. The downstream region demonstrates a synergistic dual-driver model of technical efficiency and technological progress, the midstream region is trapped in “dual stagnation” of both technical efficiency and technological progress, and the upstream region differentiates into four distinct pathways: technology-driven yet foundationally weak, efficiency-improving yet technology-lagged, endowment-advantaged yet transformation-constrained, and condition-constrained with efficiency limitations. The assessment framework and empirical findings established in this study can provide empirical evidence and policy insights for basins worldwide to resolve the ecological-development dilemma and promote forestry green transformation. Full article
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42 pages, 8148 KB  
Review
Revitalizing Urban Rivers with Biotechnological Strategies for Sustainability and Carbon Capture
by Igor Carvalho Fontes Sampaio, Virgínia de Lourdes Carvalho dos Santos, Isabela Viana Lopes de Moura, Geisa Louise Moura Costa, Estela Sales Bueno de Oliveira, Jailton Azevedo and Paulo Fernando de Almeida
Fermentation 2026, 12(1), 40; https://doi.org/10.3390/fermentation12010040 - 9 Jan 2026
Viewed by 346
Abstract
Urban rivers are essential resources for human societies; however, their degradation poses serious public health, economic, and environmental risks. Conventional physical remediation methods can partially mitigate pollution by targeting specific contaminants, but they are often limited in scope, lack long-term sustainability, and fail [...] Read more.
Urban rivers are essential resources for human societies; however, their degradation poses serious public health, economic, and environmental risks. Conventional physical remediation methods can partially mitigate pollution by targeting specific contaminants, but they are often limited in scope, lack long-term sustainability, and fail to restore ecological functions. In contrast, biotechnological approaches integrated with ecological engineering offer sustainable and nature-based solutions for river depollution, conservation, and revitalization. Although these strategies are supported by a solid theoretical framework and successful applications in other aquatic systems, their large-scale implementation in urban rivers has only recently begun to gain momentum. This review critically examines strategies for the revitalization of polluted urban rivers, progressing from conventional remediation techniques to advanced biotechnological interventions. It highlights real-world applications, evaluates their advantages and limitations, and discusses policy frameworks and management strategies required to promote the broader adoption of biotechnological solutions for sustainable urban river restoration. The goal is to demonstrate the transformative potential of integrated biotechnological, eco-engineering, and data-driven approaches—particularly microbial, phytoplankton-based, and biofilm systems—to reduce energy demand and carbon emissions in urban river restoration while highlighting the need for scalable designs, adaptive management, and supportive regulatory frameworks to enable their large-scale implementation. Full article
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21 pages, 2369 KB  
Article
The Effect of National Eco-Industrial Parks on City-Level Synergistic Reduction in Pollution and Carbon Emissions: Evidence from a Staggered DID Analysis in the Yangtze River Delta, China
by Haotian Wu, Tianzuo Zhang, Wenxin Rao and Mei Chen
Sustainability 2026, 18(2), 598; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18020598 - 7 Jan 2026
Viewed by 141
Abstract
China’s National Eco-Industrial Parks (NEIPs) represent a significant policy intervention designed to achieve the synergistic reduction in pollution and carbon emissions. While previous studies have examined the impacts of NEIPs on pollution and carbon emissions in isolation, research on their synergistic reduction is [...] Read more.
China’s National Eco-Industrial Parks (NEIPs) represent a significant policy intervention designed to achieve the synergistic reduction in pollution and carbon emissions. While previous studies have examined the impacts of NEIPs on pollution and carbon emissions in isolation, research on their synergistic reduction is still limited. This study constructs a Carbon-Pollution Co-Reduction Index (CPCRI) with weights determined by the entropy weight method (EWM) to capture the joint performance of emission intensities. By applying a staggered difference-in-differences (SDID) model to city-level panel data from the Yangtze River Delta between 2003 and 2021, the study finds that NEIPs significantly improve the CPCRI of cities where NEIPs are located by 2.30 percentage points. This positive effect exhibits a time lag, becoming statistically significant three years after establishment and strengthening thereafter. Mechanism analyses indicate that the synergistic reductions are driven by technological innovation and reduced energy intensity, while heterogeneity analyses reveal that the policy effect is more pronounced in economically developed provinces and larger cities but has diminished in recent years. Then, a coupling coordination degree (CCD) is integrated to construct a new index to capture both joint performance and synergy between reductions. These findings provide robust empirical support for NEIPs as a practical policy tool to achieve sustainable industrial transformation in the Yangtze River Delta. Full article
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18 pages, 13299 KB  
Article
Sedimentary Processes and Source-to-Sink System of the Zhuhai Formation in the Southern Steep Slope Zone of the Zhu III Depression Offshore SE China
by Ming Li, Yong Man, Li Wang, Yue Chen, Shouli Xu, Jianxin Zhang and Daojun Zhang
Minerals 2026, 16(1), 57; https://doi.org/10.3390/min16010057 - 6 Jan 2026
Viewed by 236
Abstract
The Pearl River Mouth Basin is a significant hydrocarbon basin in the northern part of the South China Sea, where deep hydrocarbon exploration has become increasingly important research in recent years. However, the current understanding of the source-to-sink and depositional systems of the [...] Read more.
The Pearl River Mouth Basin is a significant hydrocarbon basin in the northern part of the South China Sea, where deep hydrocarbon exploration has become increasingly important research in recent years. However, the current understanding of the source-to-sink and depositional systems of the Paleogene Zhuhai Formation is still limited, which restricts the exploration and discovery of large-scale sand bodies. Based on core observation, heavy mineral analysis, and well-seismic integrated analysis, this paper clarifies the development of a fan delta-tidal flat depositional and the source-to-sink systems of the Zhuhai Formation. The bedrock in the source region primarily consists of granite, Mesozoic sandstone, and tuff. The source region is divided into five parts (A1–A5), with seven main valleys (V1–V7) developed, supplying sediments to five depositional areas (S1–S5). Additionally, a fault-slope type coupled valley–fan depositional model is established for the study area, revealing the spatiotemporal distribution and main controlling factors of the fan delta system in a steeply dipping boundary fault environment. Catchment area, valley length, and cross-sectional area show a strong positive correlation with sedimentary system scale. Increased elevation difference enhances sediment transport potential energy, while reduced width-to-depth ratio strengthens hydrodynamic forces, promoting sedimentary sand body development and sedimentary system expansion. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Deep-Time Source-to-Sink in Continental Basins)
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18 pages, 1608 KB  
Article
Smoke Poetics: The Wapping Coal Riot, the Marine Police, and Romantic Forms of Urbanity
by Jesslyn Whittell
Humanities 2026, 15(1), 11; https://doi.org/10.3390/h15010011 - 5 Jan 2026
Viewed by 143
Abstract
This paper reads coal as a metonym for London’s social fabric in the writings of police theorist Patrick Colquhoun, the archival reports on the Wapping Coal Riot, and the anti-carceral poetry of William Blake. In 1798, at the behest of the West India [...] Read more.
This paper reads coal as a metonym for London’s social fabric in the writings of police theorist Patrick Colquhoun, the archival reports on the Wapping Coal Riot, and the anti-carceral poetry of William Blake. In 1798, at the behest of the West India Committee, Colquhoun had developed the first modern police force, the Thames River Police, which predated Robert Peel’s metropolitan police by over 20 years. Colquhoun’s “Treatise on the Commerce and Police of the River Thames” (1800) centers on coal in his case for policing. In his argument, coal’s energy economies link domestic affairs with the entire metropolis, making policing a city-wide problem, one that merits public support (and public funding). In reading Colquhoun’s treatise as an example of the entanglement of policing and fossil fuel power, I discuss the relevant literature from the energy humanities that connects fossil energy to the larger extractive ideologies of empire. I also demonstrate how Colquhoun’s figuring of coal builds on but alters portrayals of coal in Jonathan Swift and Anna Barbauld. The final section of this discussion demonstrates how Blake’s Jerusalem (1820) indexes dispersed, atmospheric systems of carceral power and summons dynamic, unpoliceable crowds. Blake’s smoke poetics sketch a limit of generalization, one that recoups figures of pollution and waste to riot against the systems that produce them. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Anglophone Riot)
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32 pages, 10174 KB  
Article
Performance Evaluation and Model Validation of Conventional Solar Still in Harsh Summer Climate: Case Study of Basrah, Iraq
by Mohammed Oudah Khalaf, Mehmed Rafet Özdemir and Hussein Sadiq Sultan
Sustainability 2026, 18(1), 479; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18010479 - 2 Jan 2026
Viewed by 478
Abstract
Freshwater scarcity is a critical global challenge, particularly in arid and semi-arid regions like southern Iraq. This study evaluates the thermal and distillate performance of a conventional single-slope solar still under extreme summer conditions in Basrah, Iraq. The objective is to analyze and [...] Read more.
Freshwater scarcity is a critical global challenge, particularly in arid and semi-arid regions like southern Iraq. This study evaluates the thermal and distillate performance of a conventional single-slope solar still under extreme summer conditions in Basrah, Iraq. The objective is to analyze and validate a coupled theoretical–experimental model for predicting temperature fields and freshwater productivity. The model incorporates transient energy and mass balance equations with temperature- and salinity-dependent thermophysical properties. Experiments were conducted using brackish water from the Shatt al-Arab River (salinity: 5.2 g/kg), and measured temperatures and productivity were compared against simulations over a 24-h period. Strong agreement was achieved between experimental and theoretical results, with R2>0.90 for temperature predictions and R2=0.985 for hourly productivity. Maximum hourly yield reached 0.46L/m2, with a total daily productivity of 3.5L/m2, The daily thermal efficiency was found to be 26.90% experimentally and 28.20% theoretically. A positive linear relation between the thermal gradient (TwTg) and hourly productivity was also established. The findings confirm the reliability of the developed model and highlight the potential of solar distillation as a sustainable freshwater source for high-temperature regions. Full article
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34 pages, 11413 KB  
Article
Hydrodynamic-Ecological Synergistic Effects of Interleaved Jetties: A CFD Study Based on a 180° Bend
by Dandan Liu, Suiju Lv and Chunguang Li
Hydrology 2026, 13(1), 17; https://doi.org/10.3390/hydrology13010017 - 2 Jan 2026
Viewed by 387
Abstract
Under the dual pressures of global climate change and anthropogenic activities, enhancing the ecological functions of hydraulic structures has become a critical direction for sustainable watershed management. While traditional spur dike designs primarily focus on bank protection and flood control, current demands require [...] Read more.
Under the dual pressures of global climate change and anthropogenic activities, enhancing the ecological functions of hydraulic structures has become a critical direction for sustainable watershed management. While traditional spur dike designs primarily focus on bank protection and flood control, current demands require additional consideration of river ecosystem restoration. Numerical simulations were performed using the RNG k-ε turbulence model to solve the three-dimensional Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes equations, a formulation that enhances prediction accuracy for complex flows in curved channels, including separation and reattachment. Following a grid independence study and the application of standard wall functions for near-wall treatment, a comparative analysis was conducted to examine the flow characteristics and ecological effects within a 180° channel bend under three configurations: no spur dikes, a single-side arrangement, and a staggered arrangement of non-submerged, flow-aligned, rectangular thin-walled spur dikes. The results demonstrate that staggered spur dikes significantly reduce the lateral water surface gradient by concentrating the main flow, thereby balancing water levels along the concave and convex banks and suppressing lateral channel migration. Their synergistic flow-contracting effect enhances the kinetic energy of the main flow and generates multi-scale turbulent vortices, which not only increase sediment transport capacity in the main channel but also create diverse habitat conditions. Specifically, the bed shear stress in the central channel region reached 2.3 times the natural level. Flow separation near the dike heads generated a high-velocity zone, elevating velocity and turbulent kinetic energy by factors of 2.3 and 6.8, respectively. This shift promoted bed sediment coarsening and consequently increased scour resistance. In contrast, the low-shear wake zones behind the dikes, with weakened hydrodynamic forces, facilitated fine-sediment deposition and the growth of point bars. Furthermore, this study identifies a critical interface (observed at approximately 60% of the water depth) that serves as a key interface for vertical energy conversion. Below this height, turbulence intensity intermittently increases, whereas above it, energy dissipates markedly. This critical elevation, controlled by both the spur dike configuration and flow conditions, embodies the transition mechanism of kinetic energy from the mean flow to turbulent motions. These findings provide a theoretical basis and engineering reference for optimizing eco-friendly spur dike designs in meandering rivers. Full article
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18 pages, 3204 KB  
Article
Magnetic ‘Fingerprinting’ of Sediments in Taizhou Bay: Implications for Provenance
by Lei Yang, Pinjing Chen, Yongqing Xie, Sisi Liu, Nuo Chen, Yuan Tian, Xu Zhang, Jiahan Shang and Jia Jia
Geosciences 2026, 16(1), 20; https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences16010020 - 31 Dec 2025
Viewed by 284
Abstract
The reduction in Yangtze River-derived suspended particulate matter significantly impacts adjacent marine sedimentation. Although traditionally considered the primary sediment source for the Zhejiang-Fujian Mud Belt, environmental magnetic evidence contradicts this, indicating local rivers predominantly supply the muddy tidal flats south of central Zhejiang. [...] Read more.
The reduction in Yangtze River-derived suspended particulate matter significantly impacts adjacent marine sedimentation. Although traditionally considered the primary sediment source for the Zhejiang-Fujian Mud Belt, environmental magnetic evidence contradicts this, indicating local rivers predominantly supply the muddy tidal flats south of central Zhejiang. This study focuses on analyzing sediment provenance in the central Zhejiang offshore area. Magnetic analysis shows the sediments are characterized by low magnetic mineral concentration and fine grain size, highly similar to the adjacent Jiaojiang River’s riverbed sediment and suspended particulate matter, distinct from the Yangtze. Consistent magnetic characteristics in high-energy flood layers further confirm the Jiaojiang River as the stable main source. The robust chronology, established by 210Pb and 137Cs dating, revealed significantly accelerated sedimentation after 1980. End-Member Modeling Analysis shows nearshore sediments are dominated by fine-grained components, with their proportion rising in the long term; meanwhile, coarse-grained components plummeted after 1990, indicating a shift toward stable, low-energy deposition. The contradiction between accelerated sedimentation and weakened hydrodynamics likely stems from Jiaojiang River basin human activities, enhancing local fine-grained sediment supply and trapping efficiency. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sedimentology, Stratigraphy and Palaeontology)
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36 pages, 6672 KB  
Review
How May the Increase in Pink Salmon (Oncorhynchus gorbucsha) Cause the Populations of the Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar) to Decline?
by Marja Keinänen and Pekka J. Vuorinen
Fishes 2026, 11(1), 17; https://doi.org/10.3390/fishes11010017 - 27 Dec 2025
Viewed by 379
Abstract
Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) populations in the Arctic River Teno (Tana) and other North Atlantic rivers have declined at the same time as pink salmon (Oncorhynchus gorbuscha) have begun to spawn extensively in these rivers in odd-numbered years. In [...] Read more.
Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) populations in the Arctic River Teno (Tana) and other North Atlantic rivers have declined at the same time as pink salmon (Oncorhynchus gorbuscha) have begun to spawn extensively in these rivers in odd-numbered years. In the River Teno, especially, the number of one-sea-year Atlantic salmon ascendants has decreased. In this short review, we assess, based on current information, how the abundance of pink salmon may weaken the survival of Atlantic salmon. Our hypothesis is based on recent evidence from Atlantic salmon in the Baltic Sea showing that the high marine lipid content in the diet of Atlantic salmon post-smolts impairs their growth and survival and is manifested in low numbers of ascendants and in poor thiamine (vitamin B1) status in both juvenile and spawning Baltic salmon. The high energy density of lipids increases the need for thiamine in the metabolism, and the high content of highly unsaturated fatty acids (n–3 HUFAs), like docosahexaenoic acid (DHA, 22:6n–3), in marine fish lipids increases the rate of lipid peroxidation, which consumes thiamine as it acts as an antioxidant against lipid peroxidation. The review presents information that could be used in planning possible future research on the topic. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Biology and Ecology)
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22 pages, 2984 KB  
Article
Electrochemical Removal of Cephalosporin Antibiotic—Cefuroxime Axetil from Aquatic Media Using Boron-Doped Diamond Electrodes: Process Optimization, Degradation Studies and Transformation Products Characterization
by Michał Wroński, Jakub Trawiński and Robert Skibiński
Molecules 2026, 31(1), 106; https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules31010106 - 26 Dec 2025
Viewed by 314
Abstract
Growing environmental concern over pharmaceutical contaminants in water, combined with the limited effectiveness of conventional treatment methods in removing persistent antibiotics, creates a need for advanced remediation technologies. This study investigates the degradation of the cephalosporin antibiotic cefuroxime axetil using an electrochemical advanced [...] Read more.
Growing environmental concern over pharmaceutical contaminants in water, combined with the limited effectiveness of conventional treatment methods in removing persistent antibiotics, creates a need for advanced remediation technologies. This study investigates the degradation of the cephalosporin antibiotic cefuroxime axetil using an electrochemical advanced oxidation process with a boron-doped diamond (BDD) anode. Experiments were conducted under varying pH levels and in natural water matrices, specifically river and lake water, to evaluate the process efficiency under realistic conditions. Significant differences were observed between matrices, with the best result obtained in river water, enabling complete degradation of cefuroxime axetil within 30 min. To clarify the factors influencing process efficiency, additional experiments examined the effects of dissolved organic matter (DOM) and chlorides. Cefuroxime axetil proved highly susceptible to electrooxidation, generally following pseudo-first-order kinetics, and chloride significantly accelerated its degradation. Using high-resolution mass spectrometry, ten transformation products were identified, including six not previously reported in the literature, representing a key novelty of this work. Their potential aquatic toxicity was subsequently evaluated in silico using fish and algae models. Finally, energy consumption analysis was conducted to evaluate the impact of various factors on the process’s economic efficiency. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Remediation Methods of Pharmaceutical Pollutants in Water)
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