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27 pages, 24035 KB  
Article
Olive Tree Cultivation and the Olive Oil Industry in Palestine: Trends of Growth and Decline from the Late Mamluk Period to the End of the British Mandate
by Kate Raphael, Gideon Avni, Ido Wachtel, Roi Porat, Tamer Mansour, Oz Barazani and Guy Bar-Oz
Land 2026, 15(4), 609; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15040609 - 8 Apr 2026
Viewed by 523
Abstract
This article analyzes the scale, fluctuations and geographical distribution of olive (Olea europaea) cultivation in Palestine over 550 years, from the Late Mamluk period (1300–1517), through the Ottoman era (1517–1917), until the end of the British Mandate in 1947. Although olive oil played [...] Read more.
This article analyzes the scale, fluctuations and geographical distribution of olive (Olea europaea) cultivation in Palestine over 550 years, from the Late Mamluk period (1300–1517), through the Ottoman era (1517–1917), until the end of the British Mandate in 1947. Although olive oil played a dominant role in the diet and the local economy, there is currently no research that measures and quantifies the number of olive trees or the number of villages and towns that cultivated olive trees and produced olive oil. We reconstruct the agricultural landscape with its vast olive groves and examine the cultural history of olive tree farming, the growth of the olive oil industries and their economic role and importance. The earliest figures we have, that are from the year 1596, show that 400 villages cultivated 1,400,794 olive trees. By 1943, there were 6,053,367 olive trees that were cultivated by 644 villages. We found a strong correlation (R2 = 0.96, p < 0.01) between the number of olive trees and the number of villages, indicating that olive oil demand and the olive oil industry align with population size. The research data derives from a variety of medieval local chroniclers, as well as diaries by European, North African and Middle Eastern travelers who provide descriptions of olive groves and the olive oil industry. Among the most important sources are the 1596 Ottoman tax registers. The tax registers are the first document that present clear-cut figures on the numbers of olive trees, olive presses and the names of the villages that cultivated olive groves. The main sources for the last period dealt with in this study are the British Mandate maps (1943), which display the acreage of the different crops across Palestine. The data from the maps is supplemented by two modern works on olive cultivation written by agronomists Assaf Goor (b. 1894) and Ali Nasouh (b. 1906) who were born in Palestine and employed by the British department of agriculture. The analysis of data shows that demands of local and oversea markets; the olive oil soap industry, which was based on the local olive oil; as well as competing agricultural crops like sugarcane, cotton and citrus, contributed to a complex economic structure. Olive tree cultivation did not depend on government investment. Olive groves in Palestine were rain fed, and, except for the harvest, they required relatively few working days a year. Hence, moderate policies (low taxation during periods of drought and low yields) adopted by enterprising local rulers and the central British government created a unique and relatively balanced relationship between rulers and farmers, which encouraged olive cultivation and led to a constant increase in the number of olive trees and the development of the olive oil industry. Full article
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22 pages, 1911 KB  
Article
A Two-Step Framework for Mapping, Classification, and Area Estimation of Stand- and Non-Stand-Replacing Forest Disturbances
by Isabel Aulló-Maestro, Saverio Francini, Gherardo Chirici, Cristina Gómez, Icíar Alberdi, Isabel Cañellas, Francesco Parisi and Fernando Montes
Remote Sens. 2026, 18(7), 1038; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs18071038 - 30 Mar 2026
Viewed by 542
Abstract
In recent decades, forest disturbances have increased in both frequency and intensity, driven by global warming and urbanization. Remote sensing, together with forest disturbance algorithms, offers broad opportunities for forest disturbance monitoring due to its high temporal and spatial resolution. However, operational methods [...] Read more.
In recent decades, forest disturbances have increased in both frequency and intensity, driven by global warming and urbanization. Remote sensing, together with forest disturbance algorithms, offers broad opportunities for forest disturbance monitoring due to its high temporal and spatial resolution. However, operational methods capable of predicting and classifying disturbances while providing official area estimates suitable for national statistics remain scarce. The Three Indices Three Dimensions (3I3D) algorithm has proven effective in identifying forest changes and providing area estimates in Mediterranean ecosystems using Sentinel-2 imagery. Yet, while suitable for change detection, it does not distinguish among disturbance types. Here, we propose a two-step framework for forest disturbance detection and classification, tested in inland Spain for 2018. First, a binary forest change map is produced through an enhanced version of the 3I3D approach. This step incorporates Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) analysis to calibrate the algorithm through data-driven threshold selection, allowing adaptation to specific regional conditions. Second, detected changes are classified into four disturbance types: wildfire, clear-cut, thinning, and non-stand replacing disturbance, using Sentinel-2 spectral bands, 3I3D-derived metrics, and geometric descriptors of disturbance patches. Three machine-learning classifiers were compared: Support Vector Machine, Random Forest, and Neural Network. The detection step reached an overall accuracy of 82%, estimating that 1.43% of Spanish forests (264,900 ha) were disturbed in 2018. In the classification step, Random Forest achieved the best performance, with an overall accuracy of 72%. Of the detected disturbed area, 69% corresponded to non-stand replacing disturbances, while the remaining area was classified as thinnings (19%), wildfires (26%), and clear-cuts (55%). By integrating freely available Sentinel-2 imagery, remote sensing algorithms, and photo-interpreted reference datasets, this study provides a scalable and operational approach capable of producing annual disturbance maps that combine both detection and classification of high- and low-intensity disturbances, supporting official national-scale estimates of forest disturbance areas. Full article
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103 pages, 2567 KB  
Article
Thermodynamics à la Souriau on Kähler Non-Compact Symmetric Spaces for Cartan Neural Networks
by Pietro G. Fré, Alexander S. Sorin and Mario Trigiante
Entropy 2026, 28(4), 365; https://doi.org/10.3390/e28040365 - 24 Mar 2026
Viewed by 250
Abstract
In this paper, we clarify several issues concerning the abstract geometrical formulation of thermodynamics on non-compact symmetric spaces U/H that are the mathematical model of hidden layers in the new paradigm of Cartan Neural Networks. We introduce a clear-cut distinction between [...] Read more.
In this paper, we clarify several issues concerning the abstract geometrical formulation of thermodynamics on non-compact symmetric spaces U/H that are the mathematical model of hidden layers in the new paradigm of Cartan Neural Networks. We introduce a clear-cut distinction between the generalized thermodynamics associated with Integrable Dynamical Systems and the challenging proposal of Gibbs probability distributions on U/H provided by generalized thermodynamics à la Souriau. Our main result is the proof that U/H.s supporting such Gibbs distributions are only the Kähler ones. Furthermore, for the latter, we solve the problem of determining the space of temperatures, namely, of Lie algebra elements for which the partition function converges. The space of generalized temperatures is the orbit under the adjoint action of U of a positivity domain in the Cartan subalgebra CcH of the maximal compact subalgebra HU. We illustrate how our explicit constructions for the Poincaré and Siegel planes might be extended to the whole class of Calabi–Vesentini manifolds utilizing Paint Group symmetry. Furthermore, we claim that Rao’s, Chentsov’s, and Amari’s Information Geometry and the thermodynamical geometry of Ruppeiner and Lychagin are the very same thing. In particular, we provide an explicit study of thermodynamical geometry for the Poincaré plane. The key feature of the Gibbs probability distributions in this setup is their covariance under the entire group of symmetries U. The partition function is invariant against U transformations, and the set of its arguments, namely the generalized temperatures, can always be reduced to a minimal set whose cardinality is equal to the rank of the compact denominator group HU. Full article
(This article belongs to the Collection Feature Papers in Information Theory)
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17 pages, 1427 KB  
Article
Impact of Forest Operations Planning on Greenhouse Gas Emissions
by Dariusz Pszenny, Tadeusz Moskalik and Grzegorz Trzciński
Forests 2026, 17(3), 388; https://doi.org/10.3390/f17030388 - 20 Mar 2026
Viewed by 260
Abstract
This study investigates how key planning variables—the number of wood assortments, the geometric shape of clear-cut areas, and the extraction (forwarding) distance—influence greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Twelve plots formed a heterogeneous sample with similar site type and soil moisture conditions. A Komatsu 931 [...] Read more.
This study investigates how key planning variables—the number of wood assortments, the geometric shape of clear-cut areas, and the extraction (forwarding) distance—influence greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Twelve plots formed a heterogeneous sample with similar site type and soil moisture conditions. A Komatsu 931 harvester and a 855 forwarder, driven by the experienced operators, were used to ensure consistency in operator skill. For each plot, the isoperimetric quotient was computed to quantify how plot shape correlated with labor hours, fuel consumption, and the resulting volume of GHG emitted. The number of assortments extracted per plot ranged from three to fourteen product groups. The results show that plots with more complex shapes require significantly more operator time and fuel. Increasing the number of assortments amplifies handling time and fuel use. Longer extraction distances further exacerbate the emissions. These findings underscore the importance of integrating spatial geometry and wood assortment planning into harvest scheduling to enhance productivity and reduce the carbon footprint of forest operations. Recommendations for practitioners include prioritizing more compact treatment units, optimizing assortment grouping, and minimizing extraction distances as key strategies for precision forestry. Full article
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16 pages, 426 KB  
Article
Ethical Issues Among Medical Professionals During the COVID-19 Pandemic: An Indian Cross-Sectional Study
by Padmakumar Krishnankutty Nair, Russell F. Dsouza, Ivone Duarte and Rui Nunes
COVID 2026, 6(3), 48; https://doi.org/10.3390/covid6030048 - 13 Mar 2026
Viewed by 413
Abstract
Introduction: Healthcare institutions and care providers, including medical professionals, were at the forefront of the rapid response to the challenges of the pandemic. As medical professionals across the country actively fought the COVID-19 pandemic, many ethical, social, and legal challenges arose that had [...] Read more.
Introduction: Healthcare institutions and care providers, including medical professionals, were at the forefront of the rapid response to the challenges of the pandemic. As medical professionals across the country actively fought the COVID-19 pandemic, many ethical, social, and legal challenges arose that had not been previously encountered. This study was conducted to determine the ethical challenges and dilemmas faced by medical professionals during the COVID-19 pandemic. Materials and Methods: A descriptive cross-sectional questionnaire-based survey was conducted among the registered medical practitioners in the year 2022. The study setting included health care institutions in India where COVID patients were treated. Results: 558 participants took part in this study. The availability of personal protective equipment was sufficient in 519 (93%) of cases, while 39 (7%) of respondents reported insufficient quantities of personal protective equipment. Overall, 318 (56.99%) respondents were comfortable with their duty patterns, and 435 (77.96%) medical professionals received clear-cut and updated guidelines for practicing safely; 534 (95.70%) completed both doses of vaccines available at that time in India. Conclusions: Indian medical professionals experienced substantial ethical, occupational, and psychological challenges during the COVID-19 pandemic, despite the high availability of protective equipment and vaccination coverage. Resource allocation dilemmas, demanding duty patterns, and psychological distress during quarantine underscore the need for stronger institutional support, clear guidelines, and mental health interventions during future public health crises. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section COVID Public Health and Epidemiology)
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20 pages, 904 KB  
Review
Separation of Organic Carbon and Nutrients from Liquid Waste by Using Membrane Technologies
by Stanislas Ndayishimiye, Samuel Bunani, Emery Nkurunziza and Nalan Kabay
Membranes 2026, 16(2), 71; https://doi.org/10.3390/membranes16020071 - 20 Feb 2026
Viewed by 744
Abstract
Rising concentrations of organic carbon (OC), phosphorus, and nitrogen in liquid waste from urban, industrial, and agricultural sources pose persistent challenges for environmental protection and resource recovery. Despite extensive application of microfiltration (MF) and ultrafiltration (UF) in wastewater treatment, their role in selective [...] Read more.
Rising concentrations of organic carbon (OC), phosphorus, and nitrogen in liquid waste from urban, industrial, and agricultural sources pose persistent challenges for environmental protection and resource recovery. Despite extensive application of microfiltration (MF) and ultrafiltration (UF) in wastewater treatment, their role in selective organic carbon and nutrient fractionation remains insufficiently clear-cut and is often interpreted solely through nominal pore size. This review was guided by the hypothesis that the reported limitations of MF and UF for nutrient separation are not intrinsic to the technologies but arise from simplified interpretations of separation mechanisms. A unified analytical framework was developed by synthesizing recent studies, linking membrane surface charge, pore structure, solute speciation, fouling-induced secondary layers, and operating conditions to the observed separation behavior. The analysis shows that MF fractionates particulate OC and suspended solids, whereas UF extends separation to macromolecular OC and phosphorus mainly via indirect retention mechanisms. Dissolved nitrogen species largely permeate both membranes unless they are transformed into retainable forms. Performance differences between MF and UF are conditional and system-dependent, with enhanced selectivity emerging through process integration. MF and UF can thus be repositioned as strategic fractionation interfaces within integrated treatment systems supporting circular economy–oriented wastewater management. Full article
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18 pages, 4313 KB  
Article
The Accuracy of Snapshot Observations in Determining the Structure of Tree Harvester Operating Times
by Krzysztof Polowy, Bartłomiej Naskrent, Witold Grzywiński and Marta Molińska-Glura
Forests 2026, 17(2), 226; https://doi.org/10.3390/f17020226 - 6 Feb 2026
Viewed by 232
Abstract
Traditional time study methods are time-consuming and expensive and require experienced staff. Using a time sampling methodology based on video recordings might be a time-efficient and precise solution. This study scrutinized the accuracy and margin of error for various snapshot lengths and types [...] Read more.
Traditional time study methods are time-consuming and expensive and require experienced staff. Using a time sampling methodology based on video recordings might be a time-efficient and precise solution. This study scrutinized the accuracy and margin of error for various snapshot lengths and types (fixed and variable) when estimating the operating times of a tree harvester in clearcuts and thinnings of Scots pine stands. The study focused particularly on the impact of type, recognizing its potential to influence the accuracy of the estimates. The study examined interval lengths of 3–20 s (in 1 s increments), as well as 25, 30, and 35 s, in two types (fixed and variable length). While both the type and length of an interval affected the obtained levels of errors (particularly the mean absolute percentage error—MAPE), the random-length type usually resulted in a higher level compared to the fixed-length of the same length. The proportion of operating times did not differ from that obtained by a continuous time study for all lengths and types, for both thinnings and clearcuts. As fixed-length interval studies are much easier to conduct and result in lower error levels, it is recommended that the fixed-length intervals (up to 19 s in thinning and 17 in clearcuts) are used for this type of study. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Forest Operations and Engineering)
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20 pages, 3491 KB  
Article
Pine Wilt Disease Control and Biodiversity: Three-Year Impacts of Management Regimes
by Man-Leung Ha, Chong Kyu Lee and Hyun Kim
Sustainability 2026, 18(3), 1244; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18031244 - 26 Jan 2026
Viewed by 514
Abstract
Control measures for pine wilt disease (PWD) are widely implemented, yet multi-year field comparisons that track biodiversity trajectories across contrasting management regimes remain limited. We conducted a 3-year (2023–2025) replicated study across nine pine-forest sites in Gyeongsangnam-do, Republic of Korea, comparing three management [...] Read more.
Control measures for pine wilt disease (PWD) are widely implemented, yet multi-year field comparisons that track biodiversity trajectories across contrasting management regimes remain limited. We conducted a 3-year (2023–2025) replicated study across nine pine-forest sites in Gyeongsangnam-do, Republic of Korea, comparing three management regimes (Clear-cut, Fumigation/Aerial, Unmanaged) to evaluate regime-associated patterns in ground-active beetle diversity, activity density, and community composition while considering understory vegetation cover. Regime-associated differences were consistent but dynamic: Unmanaged stands generally supported higher richness and Shannon diversity (H′), Clear-cut stands showed the lowest diversity immediately after harvest, and Fumigation/Aerial stands maintained the highest activity density. Assemblage composition separated strongly among regimes within each year, and indicator taxa highlighted regime-associated assemblage states, notably Pheropsophus jessoensis (Fumigation/Aerial), Carabus tuberculosus (Clear-cut), and Blindus strigosus (Unmanaged). Because regimes were assigned at the site level and were partially confounded by geographic region, we interpreted these outcomes as region-structured, regime-associated patterns rather than strictly causal effects. We recommend integrating PWD management with retention forestry (e.g., partial canopy and deadwood retention) and routine biodiversity monitoring to reconcile effective disease suppression with the long-term conservation of forest biodiversity. Full article
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18 pages, 3973 KB  
Article
Optimization of Energy Consumption Saving of Passenger Railway Traffic Using Neural Network Systems
by Wojciech Gamon, Jarosław Konieczny and Krzysztof Labisz
Energies 2026, 19(3), 605; https://doi.org/10.3390/en19030605 - 24 Jan 2026
Viewed by 555
Abstract
This paper deals with the issue concerning the optimization of energy consumption saving in passenger railway traffic. The background is mainly related to the decision to modernize existing trains or purchase new units, which is a key dilemma for rail transport managers. Concerning [...] Read more.
This paper deals with the issue concerning the optimization of energy consumption saving in passenger railway traffic. The background is mainly related to the decision to modernize existing trains or purchase new units, which is a key dilemma for rail transport managers. Concerning the methods used for the determination of the proper results, there is a very wide range of possibilities. This issue is complex, encompassing technical, economic, environmental, and social aspects; therefore, artificial intelligence methods were used for analysis. The obtained results have shown that the choice is not clear-cut, as each option offers both benefits and limitations. The investigations are based on real measurement values obtained from a Polish regional railway. In conclusion, it can be found that the final decision should take into account the long-term goals and the specific characteristics of the given rail system. Several factors influencing the energy consumption were taken into account. So, the aim of this paper was achieved, and the main factors were determined, which have influenced energy consumption and its impact, as well as the possibility of energy consumption reduction. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue State-of-the-Art Energy Saving in the Transport Industries)
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15 pages, 1904 KB  
Article
Stand Age and Litter Shape Myriapod Communities in a Forest Mosaic (Diplopoda, Chilopoda)
by Marea Grinvald and Ivan Hadrián Tuf
Forests 2026, 17(1), 127; https://doi.org/10.3390/f17010127 - 16 Jan 2026
Viewed by 508
Abstract
(1) Forest fragmentation and associated edge effects can strongly modify the diversity and distribution of soil invertebrates, yet their responses in temperate floodplain forests remain poorly understood. We investigated myriapod (centipede and millipede) assemblages in a fragmented forest mosaic in the protected landscape [...] Read more.
(1) Forest fragmentation and associated edge effects can strongly modify the diversity and distribution of soil invertebrates, yet their responses in temperate floodplain forests remain poorly understood. We investigated myriapod (centipede and millipede) assemblages in a fragmented forest mosaic in the protected landscape area Litovelské Pomoraví (Czech Republic), focusing on the role of stand age, ecotones and key microhabitat variables. (2) Myriapods were sampled continuously during two years using pitfall traps arranged along transects crossing four neighboring patches (clear-cut with seedlings, 10-year-old stand, 87-year-old and 127-year-old Querco–Ulmetum forests). Species diversity was quantified using the Shannon–Wiener index, and patterns were analyzed by t-tests, canonical correspondence analysis and generalized additive models. (3) We collected over six thousand individuals (10 centipede and 10 millipede species). Diversity peaked in old-growth stands and adjacent ecotones, and two of the three ecotones supported particularly high species abundances. Litter cover and thickness, stand age, and the structure of the herb and shrub layers were the most important predictors of species distributions. Dominant species (e.g., Glomeris tetrasticha Brandt, 1833, Lithobius mutabilis L. Koch, 1862, L. forficatus (Linnaeus, 1758)) showed contrasting habitat preferences, reflecting niche differentiation along microhabitat and stand-age gradients. (4) Our findings indicate that conserving a fine-grained mosaic of stand ages, together with structurally complex forest interiors and ecotones, is essential for maintaining myriapod diversity and the ecosystem functions they provide in Central European forests. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Distribution, Species Richness, and Diversity of Wildlife in Forests)
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17 pages, 8320 KB  
Article
Effects of Slope and Strip-Cutting Width on Bamboo Shoot Emergence, Culm Formation, and Understory Vegetation Diversity in Moso Bamboo Forests in China
by Dawei Fu, Fengying Guan, Zhen Li, Minkai Li, Yifan Lu, Xiao Zhou and Xuan Zhang
Plants 2026, 15(2), 258; https://doi.org/10.3390/plants15020258 - 14 Jan 2026
Viewed by 468
Abstract
Moso bamboo (Phyllostachys edulis) harvesting is labor-intensive and inefficient, while strip-cutting enables mechanized, cost-effective management and supports long-term production. Intensive strip-cutting disturbs bamboo ecosystems, altering soil, litter and understory vegetation. This may reduce long-term productivity despite moso bamboo’s rapid growth, especially [...] Read more.
Moso bamboo (Phyllostachys edulis) harvesting is labor-intensive and inefficient, while strip-cutting enables mechanized, cost-effective management and supports long-term production. Intensive strip-cutting disturbs bamboo ecosystems, altering soil, litter and understory vegetation. This may reduce long-term productivity despite moso bamboo’s rapid growth, especially in the mountainous areas like Anji, Zhejiang. To balance ecological and production goals, we evaluated strip-cutting widths of 3, 5, and 8 m under three slope classes, 5–14° (gentle, SL1), 15–24° (moderate, SL2), and 25–34° (steep, SL3), focusing on bamboo growth recovery and understory vegetation diversity. Compared with uncut control plots, the number of herbaceous and shrub species increased in all treatment plots. In 5 m moderate slope plots, shoot and culm numbers were 27% and 13% higher than those in the 3 m and 8 m plots, and 37% higher than uncut control plots. Herb species diversity, as reflected by the Shannon–Wiener (H′), Simpson (D), and Margalef richness (R) indices, was high in the narrowest clearcut strips under SL1 and SL3. Pielou’s evenness index (J) was high in the 3 and 5 m plots under SL2 and SL3. Shrub species diversity, as indicated by D and R, was high in 5 and 8 m plots under SL2 and SL3. Principal component analysis (PCA) indicated that under SL2, 5 m strip-cutting width with a score of 0.649 outperformed others. These results suggest that 5 m strip-cutting width under SL2 slope optimizes understory vegetation diversity and supports a synergistic outcome of “high shoot emergence–high culm formation” thereby achieving both ecological and production benefits. Full article
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22 pages, 5580 KB  
Article
Hydrochemical Resilience of Mountain Forest Catchments to Bark Beetle Disturbance: A Central European Study
by Kateřina Neudertová Hellebrandová, Věra Fadrhonsová and Vít Šrámek
Forests 2026, 17(1), 78; https://doi.org/10.3390/f17010078 - 7 Jan 2026
Viewed by 648
Abstract
Over the last decade, bark beetle outbreaks have significantly impacted forests in Central Europe, causing extensive loss of forest cover. We evaluated the impact of partial deforestation in three mountain forest catchments in the Jeseníky Mountains, comparing them with the unaffected Červík catchment [...] Read more.
Over the last decade, bark beetle outbreaks have significantly impacted forests in Central Europe, causing extensive loss of forest cover. We evaluated the impact of partial deforestation in three mountain forest catchments in the Jeseníky Mountains, comparing them with the unaffected Červík catchment (Beskydy Mountains) and the severely affected Pekelský stream catchment (Czech-Moravian Highlands). Atmospheric deposition in the catchments was similar, with total element input driven primarily by precipitation volumes rather than ion concentrations. We did not observe the hypothesized increase in DOC and nitrogen export, although nitrate outflow was slightly higher than atmospheric input in two cases. Significant export of calcium, magnesium, and bicarbonates was driven mainly by the geology of the individual catchments. The limited impact of bark beetle outbreaks on DOC dynamics can be attributed to the relatively low proportion of clear-cut areas and the rapid development of ground vegetation on impacted sites. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Forest Ecology and Management)
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14 pages, 232 KB  
Article
Parents’ or Guardians’ Decisions on Human Papillomavirus Vaccine Acceptance for School Children in a Southern Province of Thailand: A Mixed-Method Study
by Thanyalak Thongkamdee, Supinya Sono and Chutarat Sathirapanya
Vaccines 2026, 14(1), 53; https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines14010053 - 31 Dec 2025
Viewed by 897
Abstract
Background: Cervical cancer is associated with Human Papillomavirus (HPV) infection. Besides cervical cancer, oro-pharyngo-laryngeal or uro-genital cancers are also reported. The HPV vaccine has been strongly recommended for school age children. However, the parents’ or guardians’ hesitancy remains. Methods: This is a mixed-method [...] Read more.
Background: Cervical cancer is associated with Human Papillomavirus (HPV) infection. Besides cervical cancer, oro-pharyngo-laryngeal or uro-genital cancers are also reported. The HPV vaccine has been strongly recommended for school age children. However, the parents’ or guardians’ hesitancy remains. Methods: This is a mixed-method study in which the parents or guardians of school children, aged 10–18 years, were enrolled voluntarily. Their general demographic data, knowledge, attitudes, and awareness of vaccine accessibility, healthcare cost entitlement of the children, types of school affiliation, education administration areas where the schools were located, and the presence of a healthcare professional in family were analyzed by multiple logistic regression analysis adjusted with all studied variables to define the significant associated factors with the parents’ or guardians’ HPV vaccine acceptance (p < 0.05). In-depth interviews were subsequently performed with the selected participants until the qualitative data were saturated. Thematic analysis was applied, and the results of the two study methods were integrated to explore the reasons for vaccine acceptance or hesitancy. Results: A total of 943 questionnaire respondents were enrolled, among whom 75.8% were female and 86.4% were parents. A total of 663 (70.3%) participants accepted the HPV vaccine. Parents’ or guardians’ knowledge and attitudes, awareness of vaccine accessibility, type of school affiliation, the children’s healthcare cost entitlement, and the presence of a healthcare professional in the family were significantly associated with vaccine acceptance in the multivariate analysis (p < 0.05). The qualitative study revealed that misunderstanding of the vaccine’s safety and benefits combined with inadequate reliable information sources were associated factors with HPV vaccine hesitancy among the parents or guardians. Conclusions: Providing clear-cut knowledge about the HPV vaccine benefit vs. risk and clearing financial barriers for the parents or guardians of school children are advocated. Full article
12 pages, 4098 KB  
Article
Integrative Taxonomy Clarifies the Taxonomic Status of the Morphologically Intermediate Form Between Tropidothorax cruciger and T. sinensis (Hemiptera: Lygaeidae)
by Chenguang Zheng, Xiuxiu Zhu, Yaning Zhang, Ying Wang and Wenjun Bu
Insects 2026, 17(1), 37; https://doi.org/10.3390/insects17010037 - 26 Dec 2025
Viewed by 852
Abstract
(1) Background: The identification of Tropidothorax cruciger and T. sinensis is often complicated by the presence of the “intermediate form”. Due to the lack of molecular data, the taxonomic status of the “intermediate form” and the species boundaries between T. cruciger and T. [...] Read more.
(1) Background: The identification of Tropidothorax cruciger and T. sinensis is often complicated by the presence of the “intermediate form”. Due to the lack of molecular data, the taxonomic status of the “intermediate form” and the species boundaries between T. cruciger and T. sinensis remain uncertain; (2) Methods: In this study, we integrated morphological, molecular, and ecological data to delimit species boundaries of these two species using multiple species delimitation approaches; (3) Results: Most species delimitation analyses based on the cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) fragment suggested that T. cruciger and the “intermediate form” comprised a single species, with T. sinensis representing a separate species. This delimitation result was also supported by the analyses of BFD* and genetic clustering based on genome-wide SNPs. Under this species delimitation scenario, a clear-cut barcode gap was discovered between the interspecific and intraspecific genetic distances. In addition, environmental-related analyses showed highly similar ecological requirements of T. cruciger and the “intermediate form”, supporting their recognition as a single species; (4) Conclusions: This study clarifies the taxonomic status of the “intermediate form” and the species boundaries between T. cruciger and T. sinensis, which is essential for further studies of ecology and evolution of these species. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Insect Systematics, Phylogeny and Evolution)
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17 pages, 3482 KB  
Article
Changes in Runoff Responses After Replantation Following Clearcutting in a Mixed Forest Headwater Catchment
by Sooyoun Nam, Honggeun Lim, Hyung Tae Choi, Byoungki Choi and Qiwen Li
Forests 2025, 16(12), 1851; https://doi.org/10.3390/f16121851 - 12 Dec 2025
Viewed by 450
Abstract
This study examined changes in runoff responses in a 17.8 ha catchment, with a focus on quick and delayed runoff components associated with logging and replantation. In total, 176 precipitation events were observed from 2011 to 2019, including in the pre-cutting, operation, and [...] Read more.
This study examined changes in runoff responses in a 17.8 ha catchment, with a focus on quick and delayed runoff components associated with logging and replantation. In total, 176 precipitation events were observed from 2011 to 2019, including in the pre-cutting, operation, and post-cutting periods. Approximately 70% of the catchment, which was originally dominated by Pitch pine (Pinus rigida), was clearcut between November 2013 and November 2014 and subsequently replanted with Japanese cypress (Chamaecyparis obtusa). Event-based results revealed that both quick and delayed runoff increased significantly under high-magnitude precipitation events (Pt > 60 mm), indicating that rainfall intensity primarily controlled the generation of event runoff. During the operation period, increases in quick runoff contributed to a larger quick-runoff fraction, whereas in the post-cutting period, replantation promoted hydrological recovery by increasing delayed runoff and extending the flow duration. These changes reflect shifts in internal hydrological pathways associated with forest removal and regrowth. Overall, the results highlight that the runoff responses to clearcutting and replantation are strongly mediated by event-scale runoff components and rainfall intensity. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Forestry Activities and Water Resources)
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