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27 pages, 7041 KiB  
Article
Multi-Criteria Assessment of the Environmental Sustainability of Agroecosystems in the North Benin Agricultural Basin Using Satellite Data
by Mikhaïl Jean De Dieu Dotou Padonou, Antoine Denis, Yvon-Carmen H. Hountondji, Bernard Tychon and Gérard Nounagnon Gouwakinnou
Environments 2025, 12(8), 271; https://doi.org/10.3390/environments12080271 - 6 Aug 2025
Abstract
The intensification of anthropogenic pressures, particularly those related to agriculture driven by increasing demands for food and cash crops, generates negative environmental externalities. Assessing these externalities is essential to better identify and implement measures that promote the environmental sustainability of rural landscapes. This [...] Read more.
The intensification of anthropogenic pressures, particularly those related to agriculture driven by increasing demands for food and cash crops, generates negative environmental externalities. Assessing these externalities is essential to better identify and implement measures that promote the environmental sustainability of rural landscapes. This study aims to develop a multi-criteria assessment method of the negative environmental externalities of rural landscapes in the northern Benin agricultural basin, based on satellite-derived data. Starting from a 12-class land cover map produced through satellite image classification, the evaluation was conducted in three steps. First, the 12 land cover classes were reclassified into Human Disturbance Coefficients (HDCs) via a weighted sum model multi-criteria analysis based on nine criteria related to the negative environmental externalities of anthropogenic activities. Second, the HDC classes were spatially aggregated using a regular grid of 1 km2 landscape cells to produce the Landscape Environmental Sustainability Index (LESI). Finally, various discretization methods were applied to the LESI for cartographic representation, enhancing spatial interpretation. Results indicate that most areas exhibit moderate environmental externalities (HDC and LESI values between 2.5 and 3.5), covering 63–75% (HDC) and 83–94% (LESI) of the respective sites. Areas of low environmental externalities (values between 1.5 and 2.5) account for 20–24% (HDC) and 5–13% (LESI). The LESI, derived from accessible and cost-effective satellite data, offers a scalable, reproducible, and spatially explicit tool for monitoring landscape sustainability. It holds potential for guiding territorial governance and supporting transitions towards more sustainable land management practices. Future improvements may include, among others, refining the evaluation criteria and introducing variable criteria weighting schemes depending on land cover or region. Full article
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21 pages, 49475 KiB  
Article
NRGS-Net: A Lightweight Uformer with Gated Positional and Local Context Attention for Nighttime Road Glare Suppression
by Ruoyu Yang, Huaixin Chen, Sijie Luo and Zhixi Wang
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(15), 8686; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15158686 (registering DOI) - 6 Aug 2025
Abstract
Existing nighttime visibility enhancement methods primarily focus on improving overall brightness under low-light conditions. However, nighttime road images are also affected by glare, glow, and flare from complex light sources such as streetlights and headlights, making it challenging to suppress locally overexposed regions [...] Read more.
Existing nighttime visibility enhancement methods primarily focus on improving overall brightness under low-light conditions. However, nighttime road images are also affected by glare, glow, and flare from complex light sources such as streetlights and headlights, making it challenging to suppress locally overexposed regions and recover fine details. To address these challenges, we propose a Nighttime Road Glare Suppression Network (NRGS-Net) for glare removal and detail restoration. Specifically, to handle diverse glare disturbances caused by the uncertainty in light source positions and shapes, we designed a gated positional attention (GPA) module that integrates positional encoding with local contextual information to guide the network in accurately locating and suppressing glare regions, thereby enhancing the visibility of affected areas. Furthermore, we introduced an improved Uformer backbone named LCAtransformer, in which the downsampling layers adopt efficient depthwise separable convolutions to reduce computational cost while preserving critical spatial information. The upsampling layers incorporate a residual PixelShuffle module to achieve effective restoration in glare-affected regions. Additionally, channel attention is introduced within the Local Context-Aware Feed-Forward Network (LCA-FFN) to enable adaptive adjustment of feature weights, effectively suppressing irrelevant and interfering features. To advance the research in nighttime glare suppression, we constructed and publicly released the Night Road Glare Dataset (NRGD) captured in real nighttime road scenarios, enriching the evaluation system for this task. Experiments conducted on the Flare7K++ and NRGD, using five evaluation metrics and comparing six state-of-the-art methods, demonstrate that our method achieves superior performance in both subjective and objective metrics compared to existing advanced methods. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Computational Imaging: Algorithms, Technologies, and Applications)
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23 pages, 2235 KiB  
Article
Ternary Historical Memory-Based Robust Clustered Particle Swarm Optimization for Dynamic Berth Allocation and Crane Assignment Problem
by Ruiqi Wu, Shiming Mao and Yi Sun
Mathematics 2025, 13(15), 2516; https://doi.org/10.3390/math13152516 - 5 Aug 2025
Abstract
The berth allocation and crane assignment problem (BACAP) is a key challenge in port logistics, particularly under dynamic and uncertain vessel arrival conditions. To address the limitations of existing methods in handling large-scale and high-disturbance scenarios, this paper proposes a novel optimization framework: [...] Read more.
The berth allocation and crane assignment problem (BACAP) is a key challenge in port logistics, particularly under dynamic and uncertain vessel arrival conditions. To address the limitations of existing methods in handling large-scale and high-disturbance scenarios, this paper proposes a novel optimization framework: Ternary Historical Memory-based Robust Clustered Particle Swarm Optimization (THM-RCPSO). In this method, the initial particle swarm is divided into multiple clusters, each conducting local searches to identify regional optima. These clusters then exchange information to iteratively refine the global best solution. A ternary historical memory mechanism further enhances the optimization by recording and comparing the best solutions from three different strategies, ensuring guidance from historical performance during exploration. Experimental evaluations on 25 dynamic BACAP benchmark instances show that THM-RCPSO achieves the lowest average vessel dwell time in 22 out of 25 cases, with the lowest overall average rank among five tested algorithms. Specifically, it demonstrates significant advantages on large-scale instances with 150 vessels, where it consistently outperforms competing methods such as HRBA, ACO, and GAMCS in both solution quality and robustness. These results confirm THM-RCPSO’s strong capability in solving dynamic and large-scale DBACAP scenarios with high disturbance levels. Full article
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26 pages, 6698 KiB  
Article
Cumulative and Lagged Effects of Drought on the Phenology of Different Vegetation Types in East Asia, 2001–2020
by Kexin Deng, Mark Henderson, Binhui Liu, Weiwei Huang, Mingyang Chen, Pingping Zheng and Ruiting Gu
Remote Sens. 2025, 17(15), 2700; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17152700 - 4 Aug 2025
Abstract
Drought disturbances are becoming more frequent with global warming. Accurately assessing the regulatory effect of drought on vegetation phenology is key to understanding terrestrial ecosystem response mechanisms in the context of climate change. Previous studies on cumulative and lagged effects of drought on [...] Read more.
Drought disturbances are becoming more frequent with global warming. Accurately assessing the regulatory effect of drought on vegetation phenology is key to understanding terrestrial ecosystem response mechanisms in the context of climate change. Previous studies on cumulative and lagged effects of drought on vegetation growth have mostly focused on a single vegetation type or the overall vegetation NDVI, overlooking the possible influence of different adaptation strategies of different vegetation types and differences in drought effects on different phenological nodes. This study investigates the cumulative and lagged effects of drought on vegetation phenology across a region of East Asia from 2001 to 2020 using NDVI data and the Standardized Precipitation Evapotranspiration Index (SPEI). We analyzed the start of growing season (SOS) and end of growing season (EOS) responses to drought across four vegetation types: deciduous needleleaf forests (DNFs), deciduous broadleaf forests (DBFs), shrublands, and grasslands. Results reveal contrasting phenological responses: drought delayed SOS in grasslands through a “drought escape” strategy but advanced SOS in forests and shrublands. All vegetation types showed earlier EOS under drought stress. Cumulative drought effects were strongest on DNFs, SOS, and shrubland SOS, while lagged effects dominated DBFs and grassland SOS. Drought impacts varied with moisture conditions: they were stronger in dry regions for SOS but more pronounced in humid areas for EOS. By confirming that drought effects vary by vegetation type and phenology node, these findings enhance our understanding of vegetation adaptation strategies and ecosystem responses to climate stress. Full article
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18 pages, 1156 KiB  
Review
Increased Velocity (INVELOX) Wind Delivery System: A Review of Performance Enhancement Advances
by Anesu Godfrey Chitura, Patrick Mukumba and Ngwarai Shambira
Wind 2025, 5(3), 19; https://doi.org/10.3390/wind5030019 - 4 Aug 2025
Abstract
Residential areas are characterized by closely packed buildings which disturb wind flow resulting in low wind speeds (below 2 m/s) with a high turbulence intensity (above 20%). In order to interface between off-the-shelf wind turbines and low-quality wind, the Increased velocity (INVELOX) wind [...] Read more.
Residential areas are characterized by closely packed buildings which disturb wind flow resulting in low wind speeds (below 2 m/s) with a high turbulence intensity (above 20%). In order to interface between off-the-shelf wind turbines and low-quality wind, the Increased velocity (INVELOX) wind delivery system is an attractive wind augmentation option for such regions. The INVELOX setup can harness more energy than conventional bare wind turbines under the same incident wind conditions. However, these systems also have drawbacks and challenges that they face in their operation, which amplify the need to review, understand, and expose gaps and flaws in pursuit of increased power production in low wind quality environments. This paper seeks to review and simplify the advances done by various scholars towards improving the INVELOX delivery system. It provides the mathematical foundation on which these advances are rooted and gives an understanding of how the improvements better the geometric properties of INVELOX. The article concludes by proposing future research directions. Full article
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21 pages, 13450 KiB  
Article
Distinctive Characteristics of Rare Sellar Lesions Mimicking Pituitary Adenomas: A Collection of Unusual Neoplasms
by Andrej Pala, Nadja Grübel, Andreas Knoll, Gregor Durner, Gwendolin Etzrodt-Walter, Johannes Roßkopf, Peter Jankovic, Anja Osterloh, Marc Scheithauer, Christian Rainer Wirtz and Michal Hlaváč
Cancers 2025, 17(15), 2568; https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers17152568 - 4 Aug 2025
Viewed by 14
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Pituitary tumors account for over 90% of all sellar region masses. However, a spectrum of rare neoplastic, inflammatory, infectious, and vascular lesions—benign and malignant—can arise in the intra- and parasellar compartments and clinically and radiologically mimic PitNETs. We report a cohort [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Pituitary tumors account for over 90% of all sellar region masses. However, a spectrum of rare neoplastic, inflammatory, infectious, and vascular lesions—benign and malignant—can arise in the intra- and parasellar compartments and clinically and radiologically mimic PitNETs. We report a cohort of 47 such rare and cystic midline intracranial lesions, emphasizing their distinctive morphological, clinical, and imaging features and the personalized treatment strategies applied. Methods: In this retrospective single-center study, we reviewed all patients treated for suspected PitNETs via transsphenoidal approach between 2015 and 2024. Of 529 surgical cases, we excluded confirmed PitNETs, meningiomas, and classical intradural craniopharyngiomas. Collected data encompassed patient demographics, tumor characteristics, presenting symptoms, extent of resection or medical therapy, endocrine outcomes, and follow-up information. Results: Among all 529 patients who underwent surgical treatment for sellar lesions from 2015 to 2024, 47 cases (8.9%) were identified as rare or cystic masses. Forty-six underwent transsphenoidal resection; one patient with hypophysitis received corticosteroid therapy alone. Presenting symptoms included headache (n = 16), dizziness (n = 5), oculomotor disturbances (n = 2), and visual impairment (n = 17). Endocrine dysfunction was found in 30 patients, 27 of whom required hydrocortisone replacement. Histopathological diagnoses were led by colloid cysts (n = 14) and Rathke’s cleft cysts (n = 11). The remaining 22 cases comprised plasmacytoma, germinoma, lymphoma, pituicytoma, inverted papilloma, metastatic carcinoma, chordoma, nasopharyngeal carcinoma, chloroma, and other rare entities. Preoperative imaging diagnosis proved incorrect in 38% (18/47) of cases, with several lesions initially misidentified as PitNETs. Conclusions: Nearly 9% of presumed PitNETs were rare, often benign or inflammatory lesions requiring distinct management. Most could be safely resected and demonstrated excellent long-term outcomes. Yet, despite advanced imaging techniques, accurate preoperative differentiation remains challenging, with over one-third misdiagnosed. Clinical red flags—such as early hormone deficits, rapid progression or atypical imaging findings—should prompt early interdisciplinary evaluation and, when indicated, image-guided biopsy to avoid unnecessary surgery and ensure tailored therapy. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Pituitary Tumors: Clinical and Surgical Challenges)
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17 pages, 4689 KiB  
Article
Oscillation Mechanism of SRF-PLL in Wind Power Systems Under Voltage Sags and Improper Control Parameters
by Guoqing Wang, Zhiyong Dai, Qitao Sun, Shuaishuai Lv, Nana Lu and Jinke Ma
Electronics 2025, 14(15), 3100; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics14153100 - 3 Aug 2025
Viewed by 135
Abstract
The synchronous reference frame phase-locked loop (SRF-PLL) is widely employed for grid synchronization in wind farms. However, it may exhibit oscillations under voltage sags or improper parameter settings. These oscillations may compromise the secure integration of large-scale wind power. Therefore, mitigating the oscillations [...] Read more.
The synchronous reference frame phase-locked loop (SRF-PLL) is widely employed for grid synchronization in wind farms. However, it may exhibit oscillations under voltage sags or improper parameter settings. These oscillations may compromise the secure integration of large-scale wind power. Therefore, mitigating the oscillations of the SRF-PLL is crucial for ensuring stable and reliable operation. To this end, this paper investigates the underlying oscillation mechanism of the SRF-PLL from local and global perspectives. By taking into account the grid voltage and control parameters, it is revealed that oscillations of the SRF-PLL can be triggered by grid voltage sags and/or the improper control parameters. More specifically, from the local perspective, the SRF-PLL exhibits distinct qualitative behaviors around its stable equilibrium points under different grid voltage amplitudes. As a result, when grid voltage sags occur, the SRF-PLL may exhibit multiple oscillation modes and experience a prolonged transient response. Furthermore, from the global viewpoint, the large-signal analysis reveals that the SRF-PLL has infinitely many asymmetrical convergence regions. However, the sizes of these asymmetrical convergence regions shrink significantly under low grid voltage amplitude and/or small control parameters. In this case, even if the parameters in the small-signal model of the SRF-PLL are well-designed, a small disturbance can shift the operating point into other regions, resulting in undesirable oscillations and a sluggish dynamic response. The validity of the theoretical analysis is further supported by experimental verification. Full article
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41 pages, 7942 KiB  
Article
Ionospheric Statistical Study of the ULF Band Electric Field and Electron Density Variations Before Strong Earthquakes Based on CSES Data
by Lei Nie, Xuemin Zhang, Hong Liu and Shukai Wang
Remote Sens. 2025, 17(15), 2677; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17152677 - 2 Aug 2025
Viewed by 255
Abstract
Anomalous ionospheric disturbances have been observed as potential precursors to earthquakes. This study utilized data from the CSES satellite to investigate anomalies in the ULF band ionospheric electric field and electron density preceding earthquakes with magnitudes of Ms ≥ 6.0 in China and [...] Read more.
Anomalous ionospheric disturbances have been observed as potential precursors to earthquakes. This study utilized data from the CSES satellite to investigate anomalies in the ULF band ionospheric electric field and electron density preceding earthquakes with magnitudes of Ms ≥ 6.0 in China and neighboring regions from 2019 to 2021. Comparative analysis with a randomly generated earthquake catalog indicated that these anomalies were spatially concentrated over the epicenter and temporally clustered on specific dates prior to the events. To assess the global relevance of these findings, the analysis was extended to earthquakes with Ms ≥ 7.0 worldwide during the same period, revealing consistent spatiotemporal patterns of ionospheric anomalies in both regional and global datasets. Furthermore, by combining the two earthquake catalogs and classifying events into oceanic and continental categories, additional statistical analyses were conducted to identify distinct ionospheric disturbance patterns associated with these different tectonic environments. These results provide a solid foundation for future research aimed at identifying and extracting ionospheric anomalies as potential pre-earthquake indicators. Full article
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19 pages, 5404 KiB  
Article
Combined Effects of Flood Disturbances and Nutrient Enrichment Prompt Aquatic Vegetation Expansion: Sediment Evidence from a Floodplain Lake
by Zhuoxuan Gu, Yan Li, Jingxiang Li, Zixin Liu, Yingying Chen, Yajing Wang, Erik Jeppesen and Xuhui Dong
Plants 2025, 14(15), 2381; https://doi.org/10.3390/plants14152381 - 2 Aug 2025
Viewed by 271
Abstract
Aquatic macrophytes are a vital component of lake ecosystems, profoundly influencing ecosystem structure and function. Under future scenarios of more frequent extreme floods and intensified lake eutrophication, aquatic macrophytes will face increasing challenges. Therefore, understanding aquatic macrophyte responses to flood disturbances and nutrient [...] Read more.
Aquatic macrophytes are a vital component of lake ecosystems, profoundly influencing ecosystem structure and function. Under future scenarios of more frequent extreme floods and intensified lake eutrophication, aquatic macrophytes will face increasing challenges. Therefore, understanding aquatic macrophyte responses to flood disturbances and nutrient enrichment is crucial for predicting future vegetation dynamics in lake ecosystems. This study focuses on Huangmaotan Lake, a Yangtze River floodplain lake, where we reconstructed 200-year successional trajectories of macrophyte communities and their driving mechanisms. With a multiproxy approach we analyzed a well-dated sediment core incorporating plant macrofossils, grain size, nutrient elements, heavy metals, and historical flood records from the watershed. The results demonstrate a significant shift in the macrophyte community, from species that existed before 1914 to species that existed by 2020. Unlike the widespread macrophyte degradation seen in most regional lakes, this lake has maintained clear-water plant dominance and experienced continuous vegetation expansion over the past 50 years. We attribute this to the interrelated effects of floods and the enrichment of ecosystems with nutrients. Specifically, our findings suggest that nutrient enrichment can mitigate the stress effects of floods on aquatic macrophytes, while flood disturbances help reduce excess nutrient concentrations in the water column. These findings offer applicable insights for aquatic vegetation restoration in the Yangtze River floodplain and other comparable lake systems worldwide. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Aquatic Plants and Wetland)
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14 pages, 3081 KiB  
Article
Habitat Distribution Pattern of François’ Langur in a Human-Dominated Karst Landscape: Implications for Its Conservation
by Jialiang Han, Xing Fan, Ankang Wu, Bingnan Dong and Qixian Zou
Diversity 2025, 17(8), 547; https://doi.org/10.3390/d17080547 - 1 Aug 2025
Viewed by 142
Abstract
The Mayanghe National Nature Reserve, a key habitat for the endangered François’ langur (Trachypithecus francoisi), faces significant anthropogenic disturbances, including extensive distribution of croplands, roads, and settlements. These human-modified features are predominantly concentrated at elevations between 500 and 800 m and [...] Read more.
The Mayanghe National Nature Reserve, a key habitat for the endangered François’ langur (Trachypithecus francoisi), faces significant anthropogenic disturbances, including extensive distribution of croplands, roads, and settlements. These human-modified features are predominantly concentrated at elevations between 500 and 800 m and on slopes of 10–20°, which notably overlap with the core elevation range utilized by François’ langur. Spatial analysis revealed that langurs primarily occupy areas within the 500–800 m elevation band, which comprises only 33% of the reserve but hosts a high density of human infrastructure—including approximately 4468 residential buildings and the majority of cropland and road networks. Despite slopes >60° representing just 18.52% of the area, langur habitat utilization peaked in these steep regions (exceeding 85.71%), indicating a strong preference for rugged karst terrain, likely due to reduced human interference. Habitat type analysis showed a clear preference for evergreen broadleaf forests (covering 37.19% of utilized areas), followed by shrublands. Landscape pattern metrics revealed high habitat fragmentation, with 457 discrete habitat patches and broadleaf forests displaying the highest edge density and total edge length. Connectivity analyses indicated that distribution areas exhibit a more continuous and aggregated habitat configuration than control areas. These results underscore François’ langur’s reliance on steep, forested karst habitats and highlight the urgent need to mitigate human-induced fragmentation in key elevation and slope zones to ensure the species’ long-term survival. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Advances in Geodiversity Research)
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9 pages, 7006 KiB  
Interesting Images
Coral Bleaching and Recovery on Urban Reefs off Jakarta, Indonesia, During the 2023–2024 Thermal Stress Event
by Tries B. Razak, Muhammad Irhas, Laura Nikita, Rindah Talitha Vida, Sera Maserati and Cut Aja Gita Alisa
Diversity 2025, 17(8), 540; https://doi.org/10.3390/d17080540 - 1 Aug 2025
Viewed by 206
Abstract
Urban coral reefs in Jakarta Bay and the Thousand Islands, Indonesia, are chronically exposed to land-based pollution and increasing thermal stress. These reefs—including the site of Indonesia’s first recorded coral bleaching event in 1983—remain highly vulnerable to climate-induced disturbances. During the fourth global [...] Read more.
Urban coral reefs in Jakarta Bay and the Thousand Islands, Indonesia, are chronically exposed to land-based pollution and increasing thermal stress. These reefs—including the site of Indonesia’s first recorded coral bleaching event in 1983—remain highly vulnerable to climate-induced disturbances. During the fourth global coral bleaching event (GCBE), we recorded selective bleaching in the region, associated with a Degree Heating Weeks (DHW) value of 4.8 °C-weeks. Surveys conducted in January 2024 across a shelf gradient at four representative islands revealed patchy bleaching, affecting various taxa at depths ranging from 3 to 13 m. A follow-up survey in May 2024, which tracked the fate of 42 tagged bleached colonies, found that 36% had fully recovered, 26% showed partial recovery, and 38% had died. Bleaching responses varied across taxa, depths, and microhabitats, often occurring in close proximity to unaffected colonies. While some corals demonstrated resilience, the overall findings underscore the continued vulnerability of urban reefs to escalating thermal stress. This highlights the urgent need for a comprehensive and coordinated national strategy—not only to monitor bleaching and assess reef responses, but also to strengthen protection measures and implement best-practice restoration. Such efforts are increasingly critical in the face of more frequent and severe bleaching events projected under future climate scenarios. Full article
(This article belongs to the Collection Interesting Images from the Sea)
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17 pages, 890 KiB  
Article
Multimodal Management and Prognostic Factors in Post-Traumatic Trigeminal Neuropathic Pain Following Dental Procedures: A Retrospective Study
by Hyun-Jeong Park, Jong-Mo Ahn, Young-Jun Yang and Ji-Won Ryu
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(15), 8480; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15158480 - 30 Jul 2025
Viewed by 164
Abstract
Background: Post-traumatic trigeminal neuropathic pain (PTTNP) is a chronic condition often caused by dental procedures such as implant placement or tooth extraction. It involves persistent pain and sensory disturbances, negatively affecting the quality of life of patients. Methods: This retrospective observational study was [...] Read more.
Background: Post-traumatic trigeminal neuropathic pain (PTTNP) is a chronic condition often caused by dental procedures such as implant placement or tooth extraction. It involves persistent pain and sensory disturbances, negatively affecting the quality of life of patients. Methods: This retrospective observational study was conducted at Chosun University Dental Hospital and included 120 patients diagnosed with PTTNP involving the orofacial region. Patient data were collected between January 2014 and December 2023. Among them, 79 patients (65.8%) developed PTTNP following dental implant placement, with a total of 121 implants analyzed. The inferior alveolar nerve was most frequently involved. Clinical factors, including the time to treatment, removal of the causative factor, the Sunderland injury grade, and the type of treatment, were evaluated. Pain intensity and sensory changes were assessed using the visual analog scale (VAS). Results: Treatment initiated within the early post-injury period, commonly regarded as within three months, and implant removal tended to improve outcomes. Pharmacological therapy was the most commonly employed modality, particularly gabapentinoids (e.g., gabapentin, pregabalin) and tricyclic antidepressants such as amitriptyline. However, combined therapy, which included pharmacologic, physical, and surgical approaches, was associated with the greatest sensory improvement. Conclusions: Prompt, multidisciplinary intervention may enhance recovery in patients with PTTNP. Implant-related injuries require careful management, and multimodal strategies appear more effective than monotherapies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Oral Diseases: Diagnosis and Therapy)
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27 pages, 6263 KiB  
Article
Revealing the Ecological Security Pattern in China’s Ecological Civilization Demonstration Area
by Xuelong Yang, Haisheng Cai, Xiaomin Zhao and Han Zhang
Land 2025, 14(8), 1560; https://doi.org/10.3390/land14081560 - 29 Jul 2025
Viewed by 238
Abstract
The construction and maintenance of an ecological security pattern (ESP) are important for promoting the regional development of ecological civilizations, realizing sustainable and healthy development, and creating a harmonious and beautiful space for human beings and nature to thrive. Traditional construction methods have [...] Read more.
The construction and maintenance of an ecological security pattern (ESP) are important for promoting the regional development of ecological civilizations, realizing sustainable and healthy development, and creating a harmonious and beautiful space for human beings and nature to thrive. Traditional construction methods have the limitations of a single dimension, a single method, and excessive human subjective intervention for source and corridor identification, without considering the multidimensional quality of the sources and the structural connectivity and resilience optimization of the corridors. Therefore, an ecological civilization demonstration area (Jiangxi Province) was used as the study area, a new research method for ESP was proposed, and an empirical study was conducted. To evaluate ecosystem service (ES) importance–disturbance–risk and extract sustainability sources through the deep embedded clustering–self-organizing map (DEC–SOM) deep unsupervised learning clustering algorithm, ecological networks (ENs) were constructed by applying the minimum cumulative resistance (MCR) gravity model and circuit theory. The ENs were then optimized to improve performance by combining the comparative advantages of the two approaches in terms of structural connectivity and resilience. A comparative analysis of EN performance was constructed among different functional control zones, and the ESP was constructed to include 42 ecological sources, 134 corridors, 210 restoration nodes, and 280 protection nodes. An ESP of ‘1 nucleus, 3 belts, 6 zones, and multiple corridors’ was constructed, and the key restoration components and protection functions were clarified. This study offers a valuable reference for ecological management, protection, and restoration and provides insights into the promotion of harmonious symbiosis between human beings and nature and sustainable regional development. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Urban Ecological Indicators: Land Use and Coverage)
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21 pages, 11816 KiB  
Article
The Dual Effects of Climate Change and Human Activities on the Spatiotemporal Vegetation Dynamics in the Inner Mongolia Plateau from 1982 to 2022
by Guangxue Guo, Xiang Zou and Yuting Zhang
Land 2025, 14(8), 1559; https://doi.org/10.3390/land14081559 - 29 Jul 2025
Viewed by 177
Abstract
The Inner Mongolia Plateau (IMP), situated in the arid and semi-arid ecological transition zone of northern China, is particularly vulnerable to both climate change and human activities. Understanding the spatiotemporal vegetation dynamics and their driving forces is essential for regional ecological management. This [...] Read more.
The Inner Mongolia Plateau (IMP), situated in the arid and semi-arid ecological transition zone of northern China, is particularly vulnerable to both climate change and human activities. Understanding the spatiotemporal vegetation dynamics and their driving forces is essential for regional ecological management. This study employs Sen’s slope estimation, BFAST analysis, residual trend method and Geodetector to analyze the spatial patterns of Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) variability and distinguish between climatic and anthropogenic influences. Key findings include the following: (1) From 1982 to 2022, vegetation cover across the IMP exhibited a significant greening trend. Zonal analysis showed that this spatial heterogeneity was strongly regulated by regional hydrothermal conditions, with varied responses across land cover types and pronounced recovery observed in high-altitude areas. (2) In the western arid regions, vegetation trends were unstable, often marked by interruptions and reversals, contrasting with the sustained greening observed in the eastern zones. (3) Vegetation growth was primarily temperature-driven in the eastern forested areas, precipitation-driven in the central grasslands, and severely limited in the western deserts due to warming-induced drought. (4) Human activities exerted dual effects: significant positive residual trends were observed in the Hetao Plain and southern Horqin Sandy Land, while widespread negative residuals emerged across the southern deserts and central grasslands. (5) Vegetation change was driven by climate and human factors, with recovery mainly due to climate improvement and degradation linked to their combined impact. These findings highlight the interactive mechanisms of climate change and human disturbance in regulating terrestrial vegetation dynamics, offering insights for sustainable development and ecosystem education in climate-sensitive systems. Full article
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59 pages, 3467 KiB  
Review
Are Hippocampal Hypoperfusion and ATP Depletion Prime Movers in the Genesis of Alzheimer’s Disease? A Review of Recent Pertinent Observations from Molecular Biology
by Valerie Walker
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2025, 26(15), 7328; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms26157328 - 29 Jul 2025
Viewed by 279
Abstract
Alzheimer’s dementia (AD) is a disease of the ageing brain. It begins in the hippocampal region with the epicentre in the entorhinal cortex, then gradually extends into adjacent brain areas involved in memory and cognition. The events which initiate the damage are unknown [...] Read more.
Alzheimer’s dementia (AD) is a disease of the ageing brain. It begins in the hippocampal region with the epicentre in the entorhinal cortex, then gradually extends into adjacent brain areas involved in memory and cognition. The events which initiate the damage are unknown and under intense investigation. Localization to the hippocampus can now be explained by anatomical features of the blood vessels supplying this region. Blood supply and hence oxygen delivery to the area are jeopardized by poor flow through narrowed arteries. In genomic and metabolomic studies, the respiratory chain and mitochondrial pathways which generate ATP were leading pathways associated with AD. This review explores the notion that ATP depletion resulting from hippocampal hypoperfusion has a prime role in initiating damage. Sections cover sensing of ATP depletion and protective responses, vulnerable processes with very heavy ATP consumption (the malate shuttle, the glutamate/glutamine/GABA (γ-aminobutyric acid) cycle, and axonal transport), phospholipid disturbances and peroxidation by reactive oxygen species, hippocampal perfusion and the effects of hypertension, chronic hypoxia, and arterial vasospasm, and an overview of recent relevant genomic studies. The findings demonstrate strong scientific arguments for the proposal with increasing supportive evidence. These lines of enquiry should be pursued. Full article
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