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38 pages, 6865 KB  
Article
Land Use and Land Cover Change Patterns from Orbital Remote Sensing Products: Spatial Dynamics and Trend Analysis in Northeastern Brazil
by Jhon Lennon Bezerra da Silva, Marcos Vinícius da Silva, Pabrício Marcos Oliveira Lopes, Rodrigo Couto Santos, Ailton Alves de Carvalho, Geber Barbosa de Albuquerque Moura, Thieres George Freire da Silva, Alan Cézar Bezerra, Alexandre Maniçoba da Rosa Ferraz Jardim, Maria Beatriz Ferreira, Patrícia Costa Silva, Josef Augusto Oberdan Souza Silva, Marcio Mesquita, Pedro Henrique Dias Batista, Rodrigo Aparecido Jordan and Henrique Fonseca Elias de Oliveira
Land 2025, 14(10), 1954; https://doi.org/10.3390/land14101954 - 26 Sep 2025
Abstract
Environmental degradation and soil desertification are among the most severe environmental issues of recent decades worldwide. Over time, these processes have led to increasingly extreme and highly dynamic climatic conditions. In Brazil, the Northeast Region is characterized by semi-arid and arid areas that [...] Read more.
Environmental degradation and soil desertification are among the most severe environmental issues of recent decades worldwide. Over time, these processes have led to increasingly extreme and highly dynamic climatic conditions. In Brazil, the Northeast Region is characterized by semi-arid and arid areas that exhibit high climatic variability and are extremely vulnerable to environmental changes and pressures from human activities. The application of geotechnologies and geographic information system (GIS) modeling is essential to mitigate the impacts and pressures on the various ecosystems of Northeastern Brazil (NEB), where the Caatinga biome is predominant and critically threatened by these factors. In this context, the objective was to map and assess the spatiotemporal patterns of land use and land cover (LULC), detecting significant trends of loss and gain, based on surface reflectance data and precipitation data over two decades (2000–2019). Remote sensing datasets were utilized, including Landsat satellite data (LULC data), MODIS sensor data (surface reflectance product) and TRMM data (precipitation data). The Google Earth Engine (GEE) software was used to process orbital images and determine surface albedo and acquisition of the LULC dataset. Satellite data were subjected to multivariate analysis, descriptive statistics, dispersion and variability assessments. The results indicated a significant loss trend over the time series (2000–2019) for forest areas (ZMK = −5.872; Tau = −0.958; p < 0.01) with an annual loss of −3705.853 km2 and a total loss of −74,117.06 km2. Conversely, farming areas (agriculture and pasture) exhibited a significant gain trend (ZMK = 5.807; Tau = 0.947; p < 0.01), with an annual gain of +3978.898 km2 and a total gain of +79,577.96 km2, indicating a substantial expansion of these areas over time. However, it is important to emphasize that deforestation of the region’s native vegetation contributes to reduced water production and availability. The trend analysis identified an increase in environmental degradation due to the rapid expansion of land use. LULC and albedo data confirmed the intensification of deforestation in the Northern, Northwestern, Southern and Southeastern regions of NEB. The Northwestern region was the most directly impacted by this increase due to anthropogenic pressures. Over two decades (2000–2019), forested areas in the NEB lost approximately 80.000 km2. Principal component analysis (PCA) identified a significant cumulative variance of 87.15%. It is concluded, then, that the spatiotemporal relationship between biophysical conditions and regional climate helps us to understand and evaluate the impacts and environmental dynamics, especially of the vegetation cover of the NEB. Full article
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19 pages, 8109 KB  
Article
Habitat Suitability and Relative Abundance of the European Wildcat (Felis silvestris) in the Southeastern Part of Its Range
by Despina Migli, Christos Astaras, Nikolaos Kiamos, Stefanos Kyriakidis, Yorgos Mertzanis, George Boutsis, Nikolaos Oikonomakis, Yiannis Tsaknakis and Dionisios Youlatos
Animals 2025, 15(19), 2816; https://doi.org/10.3390/ani15192816 - 26 Sep 2025
Abstract
The European wildcat exhibits considerable plasticity in its habitat requirements across its distribution, with differences increasing along a continental-scale latitudinal gradient. While wildcats often favor deciduous and mixed forests with dense cover and prey, studies show these preferences vary across their expansion. Range-wide [...] Read more.
The European wildcat exhibits considerable plasticity in its habitat requirements across its distribution, with differences increasing along a continental-scale latitudinal gradient. While wildcats often favor deciduous and mixed forests with dense cover and prey, studies show these preferences vary across their expansion. Range-wide conservation efforts will benefit from incorporating knowledge generated by robust regional ecological models. We used data from a large camera trap grid (n = 292 stations), spanning across eight wildcat-associated habitats, within its range in northern Greece, to understand the regional ecological parameters affecting the species’ habitat selection. We analyzed the data using single-season density-induced detection heterogeneity occupancy models (Royle–Nichols), considering 12 environmental and anthropogenic parameters. The global model’s GoF was high (p = 0.9). Elevation and percent forest cover were both significantly negatively related to wildcat occupancy (as derived from the modeled “relative abundance index” N). Likewise, there was a negative, but moderate, relation between distance to freshwater bodies and human settlements with wildcat occupancy. We used the model-average coefficients to generate a predictive map of wildcat relative abundance across northern Greece, which identified 47,930 km2 of potential wildcat habitat. Assuming a range of densities between 0.05 and 0.3 ind/km2 in areas with predicted low, medium, and high relative abundance, we speculate the putative wildcat population in northern Greece to be between 3535 and 7070 individuals. The findings, which vary from ecological models of the species in northern Europe, show the need for regional models and the importance of Greece, and the Balkan peninsula, for the species. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Ecology and Conservation)
21 pages, 2807 KB  
Article
Discrimination of Multiple Foliar Diseases in Wheat Using Novel Feature Selection and Machine Learning
by Sen Zhuang, Yujuan Huang, Jie Zhu, Qingluo Yang, Wei Li, Yangyang Gu, Tongjie Li, Hengbiao Zheng, Chongya Jiang, Tao Cheng, Yongchao Tian, Yan Zhu, Weixing Cao and Xia Yao
Remote Sens. 2025, 17(19), 3304; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17193304 - 26 Sep 2025
Abstract
Wheat, a globally vital food crop, faces severe threats from numerous foliar diseases, which often infect agricultural fields, significantly compromising yield and quality. Rapid and accurate identification of the specific disease is crucial for ensuring food security. Although progress has been made in [...] Read more.
Wheat, a globally vital food crop, faces severe threats from numerous foliar diseases, which often infect agricultural fields, significantly compromising yield and quality. Rapid and accurate identification of the specific disease is crucial for ensuring food security. Although progress has been made in wheat foliar disease detection using RGB imaging and spectroscopy, most prior studies have focused on identifying the presence of a single disease, without considering the need to operationalize such methods, and it will be necessary to differentiate between multiple diseases. In this study, we systematically investigate the differentiation of three wheat foliar diseases (e.g., powdery mildew, stripe rust, and leaf rust) and evaluate feature selection strategies and machine learning models for disease identification. Based on field experiments conducted from 2017 to 2024 employing artificial inoculation, we established a standardized hyperspectral database of wheat foliar diseases classified by disease severity. Four feature selection methods were employed to extract spectral features prior to classification: continuous wavelet projection algorithm (CWPA), continuous wavelet analysis (CWA), successive projections algorithm (SPA), and Relief-F. The selected features (which are derived by CWPA, CWA, SPA, and Relief-F algorithm) were then used as predictors for three disease-identification machine learning models: random forest (RF), k-nearest neighbors (KNN), and naïve Bayes (BAYES). Results showed that CWPA outperformed other feature selection methods. The combination of CWPA and KNN for discriminating disease-infected (powdery mildew, stripe rust, leaf rust) and healthy leaves by using only two key features (i.e., 668 nm at wavelet scale 5 and 894 nm at wavelet scale 7), achieved an overall accuracy (OA) of 77% and a map-level image classification efficacy (MICE) of 0.63. This combination of feature selection and machine learning model provides an efficient and precise procedure for discriminating between multiple foliar diseases in agricultural fields, thus offering technical support for precision agriculture. Full article
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23 pages, 12353 KB  
Article
Cross-Media Infrared Measurement and Temperature Rise Characteristic Analysis of Coal Mine Electrical Equipment
by Xusheng Xue, Jianxin Yang, Hongkui Zhang, Yuan Tian, Qinghua Mao, Enqiao Zhang and Fandong Chen
Energies 2025, 18(19), 5122; https://doi.org/10.3390/en18195122 - 26 Sep 2025
Abstract
With the advancement of coal mine electrical equipment toward larger scale, higher complexity, and greater intelligence, traditional temperature rise monitoring methods have revealed critical limitations such as intrusive measurement, low spatial resolution, and delayed response. This study proposes a novel cross-media infrared measurement [...] Read more.
With the advancement of coal mine electrical equipment toward larger scale, higher complexity, and greater intelligence, traditional temperature rise monitoring methods have revealed critical limitations such as intrusive measurement, low spatial resolution, and delayed response. This study proposes a novel cross-media infrared measurement method combined with temperature rise characteristic analysis to overcome these challenges. First, a cross-media measurement principle is introduced, which uses the enclosure surface temperature as a proxy for the internal heat source temperature, thereby enabling non-invasive internal temperature rise measurement. Second, a non-contact, infrared thermography-based array-sensing measurement approach is adopted, facilitating the transition from traditional single-point temperature measurement to full-field thermal mapping with high spatial resolution. Furthermore, a multi-source data perception method is established by integrating infrared thermography with real-time operating current and ambient temperature, significantly enhancing the comprehensiveness and timeliness of thermal state monitoring. A hybrid prediction model combining Support Vector Regression (SVR) and Random Forest Regression (RFR) is developed, which effectively improves the prediction accuracy of the maximum internal temperature—particularly addressing the issue of weak surface temperature features during low heating stages. The experimental results demonstrate that the proposed method achieves high accuracy and stability across varying operating currents, with a root mean square error of 0.741 °C, a mean absolute error of 0.464 °C, and a mean absolute percentage error of 0.802%. This work provides an effective non-contact solution for real-time temperature rise monitoring and risk prevention in coal mine electrical equipment. Full article
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24 pages, 5860 KB  
Review
Mapping the Rise in Machine Learning in Environmental Chemical Research: A Bibliometric Analysis
by Bojana Stanic and Nebojsa Andric
Toxics 2025, 13(10), 817; https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics13100817 - 26 Sep 2025
Abstract
Machine learning (ML) is reshaping how environmental chemicals are monitored and how their hazards are evaluated for human health. Here, we mapped this landscape by analyzing 3150 peer-reviewed articles (1985–2025) from the Web of Science Core Collection. Co-citation, co-occurrence, and temporal trend analyses [...] Read more.
Machine learning (ML) is reshaping how environmental chemicals are monitored and how their hazards are evaluated for human health. Here, we mapped this landscape by analyzing 3150 peer-reviewed articles (1985–2025) from the Web of Science Core Collection. Co-citation, co-occurrence, and temporal trend analyses in VOSviewer and R reveal an exponential publication surge from 2015, dominated by environmental science journals, with China and the United States leading in output. Eight thematic clusters emerged, centered on ML model development, water quality prediction, quantitative structure–activity applications, and per-/polyfluoroalkyl substances, with XGBoost and random forests as the most cited algorithms. A distinct risk assessment cluster indicates migration of these tools toward dose–response and regulatory applications, yet keyword frequencies show a 4:1 bias toward environmental endpoints over human health endpoints. Emerging topics include climate change, microplastics, and digital soil mapping, while lignin, arsenic, and phthalates appear as fast-growing but understudied chemicals. Our findings expose gaps in chemical coverage and health integration. We recommend expanding the substance portfolio, systematically coupling ML outputs with human health data, adopting explainable artificial intelligence workflows, and fostering international collaboration to translate ML advances into actionable chemical risk assessments. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Novel Methods in Toxicology Research)
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29 pages, 22819 KB  
Article
Enhanced Spatially Explicit Modeling of Soil Particle Size and Texture Classification Using a Novel Two-Point Machine Learning Hybrid Framework
by Liya Qin, Zong Wang and Xiaoyuan Zhang
Agriculture 2025, 15(19), 2008; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture15192008 - 25 Sep 2025
Abstract
Accurately predicting soil particle size fractions (PSFs) and classifying soil texture types are essential for soil resource assessment and sustainable land management. PSFs, comprising clay, silt, and sand, form a compositional dataset constrained to sum to 100%. The practical implications of incorporating compositional [...] Read more.
Accurately predicting soil particle size fractions (PSFs) and classifying soil texture types are essential for soil resource assessment and sustainable land management. PSFs, comprising clay, silt, and sand, form a compositional dataset constrained to sum to 100%. The practical implications of incorporating compositional data characteristics into PSF mapping remain insufficiently explored. This study applies a two-point machine learning (TPML) model, integrating spatial autocorrelation and attribute similarity, to enhance both the quantitative prediction of PSFs and the categorical classification of soil texture types in the Heihe River Basin, China. TPML was compared with random forest regression kriging (RFRK), random forest (RF), XGBoost, and ordinary kriging (OK), and a novel TPML-C model was developed for multi-class classification tasks. Results show that TPML achieved R2 values of 0.58, 0.55, and 0.64 for clay, silt, and sand, respectively. Among all models, the ALR_TPML predictions showed the most consistent agreement with the observed variability, with predicted ranges of 2.63–98.28% for silt, 0.26–36.16% for clay, and 0.64–96.90% for sand. Across all models, the dominant soil texture types were identified as Sandy Loam (SaLo), Loamy Sand (LoSa), and Silty Loam (SiLo). For soil texture classification, TPML with raw, ALR-, and ILR-transformed data reached right ratios of 61.09%, 55.78%, and 60.00%, correctly identifying 25, 26, and 27 types out of 43. TPML with raw data exhibited strong performance in both regression and classification, with superior ability to separate ambiguous boundaries. Log-ratio transformations, particularly ILR, further improved classification performance by addressing the constraints of compositional data. These findings demonstrate the promise of hybrid machine learning approaches for digital soil mapping and precision agriculture. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Agricultural Soils)
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40 pages, 12558 KB  
Article
Integrating Multi-Source Remote Sensing and Spatial Metrics to Quantify Urban Park Design Effects on Surface Cool Islands in Mexicali, Mexico
by Alan García-Haro, Blanca Arellano and Josep Roca
Remote Sens. 2025, 17(19), 3296; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17193296 - 25 Sep 2025
Abstract
The Surface Cool Island (SCI) refers to localized reductions in land surface temperature (LST) produced by features that enhance evapotranspiration, shading, and energy flux regulation. In arid urban areas, vegetated parks play a key role in mitigating heat through these mechanisms. This study [...] Read more.
The Surface Cool Island (SCI) refers to localized reductions in land surface temperature (LST) produced by features that enhance evapotranspiration, shading, and energy flux regulation. In arid urban areas, vegetated parks play a key role in mitigating heat through these mechanisms. This study evaluates how park vegetation structure and spatial configuration influence SCI intensity (ΔTmax) and extent (Lmax) using multi-seasonal, day–night satellite observations in Mexicali, Mexico. A total of 435 parks were analyzed using Landsat 8/9 TIRS (30 m) for LST and Sentinel-2 MSI (10 m) for vegetation mapping via NDVI thresholding and supervised random forest (RF) classification. On average, parks lowered daytime LST by 0.81 °C (max: 6.41 °C), with a mean Lmax of 120 m; nighttime cooling was weaker (avg. ΔTmax: 0.37 °C; Lmax: 48 m). RF-derived metrics explained SCI variability more effectively (R2 up to 0.64 for ΔTmax; 0.48 for Lmax) than NDVI-based metrics (R2 < 0.35), highlighting the value of object-based land cover classification in capturing vegetation structure. This remote sensing framework offers a scalable method for assessing urban cooling performance and supports climate-adaptive green space design in hot-arid cities. Full article
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23 pages, 2612 KB  
Article
Leveraging Machine Learning for Severity Level-Wise Biomarker Identification in Prostate Cancer Microarray Gene Expression Data
by Ahmed Al Marouf, Tarek A. Bismar, Sunita Ghosh, Jon G. Rokne and Reda Alhajj
Biomedicines 2025, 13(10), 2350; https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines13102350 - 25 Sep 2025
Abstract
Background: Prostate cancer is the most commonly occurring cancer amongst men. The detection and treatment of this cancer is therefore of great importance. The severity level of this cancer, which is established as a score in the Gleason Grading Group (GGC), guides the [...] Read more.
Background: Prostate cancer is the most commonly occurring cancer amongst men. The detection and treatment of this cancer is therefore of great importance. The severity level of this cancer, which is established as a score in the Gleason Grading Group (GGC), guides the treatment of the cancer. Methods: In this paper, traditional machine learning (ML) classification methods such as Decision Tree (DT), Random Forest (RF), Support Vector Machine (SVM), and XGBoost (XGB), which have recently been shown to accurately identifying biomarkers for computational biology, are leveraged to find potential biomarkers for the different GGC scores. A ML framework that maps the Gleason Grading Group (GGG) into five severity levels—low, intermediate-low, intermediate, intermediate-high, and high—has been developed using the above methods. The microarray data for this ML method have been derived from immunohistochemical tests. The study includes severity level-wise biomarker identification, incorporating missing value imputation, class imbalance handling using the SMOTE-Tomek link method, and stratified k-fold validation to ensure robust biomarker selection. Results: The framework is evaluated on prostate cancer tissue microarray gene expression data from 1119 samples. A combination of high-aggressive and low-aggressive signatures are used in four experimental setups. The results demonstrate the effectiveness of the approach in distinguishing between critical biomarkers with highly accurate models, obtaining 96.85% accuracy using the XGBoost method. Conclusions: Leveraging ML gives a potential ground to involve the domain experts and the satisfactory results have approved that. For the future physician-in-the-loop approach can be tested to ensure further diagnosis impact. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Cancer Biology and Oncology)
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22 pages, 4958 KB  
Article
Impact of Land Cover Change on Eutrophication Processes in Phewa Lake, Nepal
by Rajan Subedi, Bikesh Jojiju, Matthew McBroom, Leticia Gaspar, Gerd Dercon and Ana Navas
Hydrology 2025, 12(10), 246; https://doi.org/10.3390/hydrology12100246 - 25 Sep 2025
Abstract
Increasing demand for land and resources in Himalayan catchments is altering hydrological processes and threatening freshwater ecosystems. Sediment mobilization and nutrient fluxes, especially during monsoon rainfall events, are intensifying the degradation of water bodies. This study investigates land cover change and its effects [...] Read more.
Increasing demand for land and resources in Himalayan catchments is altering hydrological processes and threatening freshwater ecosystems. Sediment mobilization and nutrient fluxes, especially during monsoon rainfall events, are intensifying the degradation of water bodies. This study investigates land cover change and its effects on nutrient dynamics in the Phewa Lake catchment, Nepal. Landsat imagery from 1990 to 2021, processed through Google Earth Engine, was used to map land changes. Nutrient loading for the two time periods was estimated with the InVEST model. Surface soils were sampled across the catchment to analyze nitrogen and phosphorus distribution, while their particle-bound transport to the lake was assessed through riverbed sediments and the suspended sediments collected during monsoon rainfalls. Pre-monsoon water quality was examined to evaluate eutrophication levels across different lake zones. Results reveal forest recovery in the upper catchment, but agricultural land in the lower catchment is being rapidly converted to urban areas. While forest recovery has enhanced sediment retention, nutrient inputs to the lake, particularly nitrogen and phosphorus, have increased. Fertilizer leaching and untreated sewage emerge as key sources in rural and urban areas, respectively. Seasonal constraints of the dataset may underestimate the overall extent of water quality deterioration, as indicated by high nutrient loads in monsoon suspended sediments. Overall, this study highlights the dual effect of land cover change: forest regrowth coincides with rising nutrient discharge. Without timely interventions, growing urban populations in the region may face worsening water quality challenges. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Lakes as Sensitive Indicators of Hydrology, Environment, and Climate)
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18 pages, 2397 KB  
Article
IVIM-DWI-Based Radiomics for Lesion Phenotyping and Clinical Status Prediction in Relapsing–Remitting Multiple Sclerosis
by Othman I. Alomair, Mohammed S. Alshuhri, Haitham F. Al-Mubarak, Sami A. Alghamdi, Abdullah H. Abujamea, Salman Aljarallah, Nuha M. Alkhawajah, Yazeed I. Alashban and Nyoman D. Kurniawan
J. Clin. Med. 2025, 14(19), 6753; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14196753 - 24 Sep 2025
Viewed by 30
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Multiple sclerosis (MS) is an autoimmune disorder affecting the central nervous system, characterised by the degradation of myelin, which results in various neurological symptoms. This study aims to utilise radiomics features to evaluate the predictive value of IVIM diffusion parameters, namely, the [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Multiple sclerosis (MS) is an autoimmune disorder affecting the central nervous system, characterised by the degradation of myelin, which results in various neurological symptoms. This study aims to utilise radiomics features to evaluate the predictive value of IVIM diffusion parameters, namely, the true diffusion coefficient (D), pseudo-diffusion coefficient (D*), and perfusion fraction (f), in relation to disability severity, assessed using the Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS), and mobility in patients with relapsing–remitting MS. Methods: This retrospective cross-sectional study analysed MRI data from 197 patients diagnosed with multiple sclerosis (MS). Quantitative intravoxel incoherent motion (IVIM) parameters were obtained using a 1.5 Tesla MRI scanner. Clinical information collected included age, disease duration, number of relapses, status of disease-modifying therapy (DMT), and the need for mobility assistance. Machine learning (ML) techniques, such as XGB, Random Forest, and ANN, were employed to explore the relationships between radiomic IVIM parameters and these clinical variables. Results: IVIM radiomics achieved high accuracy in lesion phenotyping. Random Forest distinguished enhancements from non-enhancing lesions with 96% accuracy and AUC = 0.99 with IVIM-f and D* maps. CNN also reached ~92% accuracy (AUC 0.97) with IVIM-f. For disability prediction, IVIM-D and D* radiomics strongly correlated with EDSS: Random Forest achieved 89% accuracy (AUC = 0.90), while CNN achieved 90% accuracy (AUC = 0.95). Mobility impairment was predicted with the highest performance—RNN achieved 96% accuracy (AUC = 0.99) across IVIM-f features. In contrast, relapse history, disease duration, and treatment status were poorly predicted (<75% accuracy). Conclusions: ML analyses of IVIM metrics provided independent predictors of functional impairment and disability in MS. Our novel approach may be used to improve diagnostic accuracy and develop personalised treatment strategies for MS patients. Full article
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24 pages, 1246 KB  
Systematic Review
Global Forest Fire Assessment Methods: A Comparative Analysis of Hazard, Susceptibility, and Vulnerability Approaches in Different Landscapes
by Bojan Mihajlovski and Miglena Zhiyanski
Fire 2025, 8(10), 380; https://doi.org/10.3390/fire8100380 - 24 Sep 2025
Viewed by 65
Abstract
Forest fire risk assessment methodologies vary considerably, presenting challenges for adaptation to specific local contexts. This study provides a systematic analysis of forest fire assessment approaches across the Mediterranean basin, American, African, and Asian regions through a comprehensive review of 112 peer-reviewed studies [...] Read more.
Forest fire risk assessment methodologies vary considerably, presenting challenges for adaptation to specific local contexts. This study provides a systematic analysis of forest fire assessment approaches across the Mediterranean basin, American, African, and Asian regions through a comprehensive review of 112 peer-reviewed studies published from 2015 to 2025. Statistical significance testing (Chi-square tests, p < 0.05) confirmed significant regional variation in methodological preferences and indicator usage patterns. Key findings revealed that Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis dominates the field (44% of studies, n = 49), with Analytical Hierarchical Process being the most utilized method (39 studies). Machine learning approaches represent 25% (n = 28), with Random Forest leading significantly (22 applications). The analysis identified 67 indicators across seven major categories, with topographic factors (slope: 105 studies) and anthropogenic indicators (road networks: 92 studies) showing statistically significantly highest usage rates (p < 0.001), representing a statistically significant critical gap in vulnerability assessment (p < 0.01). Organizational factors remain severely underrepresented (a maximum of 14 studies for any factor), representing a statistically significant critical gap in risk assessments (p < 0.01). Statistical analysis revealed that while Mediterranean approaches excel in integrating historical and cultural factors, American methods emphasize advanced technology integration, while Asian approaches focus on socio-economic dynamics and land-use interactions. This study serves as a foundation for developing tailored assessment frameworks that combine remote sensing analysis, ground-based surveys, and community input while accounting for local constraints in data availability and technical capacity. The study concludes that effective forest fire risk assessment requires a balanced integration of global best practices with local environmental, social, and technical considerations, offering a roadmap for future forest fire risk assessment approaches in different regions worldwide. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Disaster Risk Management and Resilience)
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32 pages, 5245 KB  
Article
A Methodological Approach to Address Economic Vulnerability to Wildfires in Europe
by Simone Martino, Clara Ochoa, Juan Ramon Molina and Emilio Chuvieco
Fire 2025, 8(10), 379; https://doi.org/10.3390/fire8100379 - 23 Sep 2025
Viewed by 120
Abstract
The assessment of the economic vulnerability of natural disasters is a necessary step in the evaluation of any risks. This study proposes the approach implemented under the H2020 FirEurisk project to value the economic damage of wildfires on a European scale. Economic damage [...] Read more.
The assessment of the economic vulnerability of natural disasters is a necessary step in the evaluation of any risks. This study proposes the approach implemented under the H2020 FirEurisk project to value the economic damage of wildfires on a European scale. Economic damage is assessed as the net value change in natural (agricultural and forestry resources and their ecosystem services) and manufactured assets under simulated fire intensity, taking into consideration the time necessary for natural capital to recover to the pre-damaged conditions. We show minimum, maximum, and average damage for European countries and map the critical areas. Damages to provisioning-ecosystem services are more pronounced in Central Europe because of the lower resilience of ecosystems compared to the Mediterranean, suggesting that mitigation measures (such as managing vegetation to reduce fuel; improving access to fire services; and engaging communities through education, agriculture, and forest management participation) must be enforced. We are confident that the approach proposed may stimulate further research to test the goodness of the estimates proposed and suggest where it is more appropriate to invest in fire prevention. Full article
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40 pages, 7450 KB  
Systematic Review
A Systematic Review of AI-Based Classifications Used in Agricultural Monitoring in the Context of Achieving the Sustainable Development Goals
by Vasile Adrian Nan, Gheorghe Badea, Ana Cornelia Badea and Anca Patricia Grădinaru
Sustainability 2025, 17(19), 8526; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17198526 - 23 Sep 2025
Viewed by 327
Abstract
The integration of Artificial Intelligence (AI) into remote sensing data classification has revolutionized agriculture and environmental monitoring. AI is one of the main technologies used in smart farming that enhances and optimizes the sustainability of agricultural production. The use of AI in agriculture [...] Read more.
The integration of Artificial Intelligence (AI) into remote sensing data classification has revolutionized agriculture and environmental monitoring. AI is one of the main technologies used in smart farming that enhances and optimizes the sustainability of agricultural production. The use of AI in agriculture can involve land use mapping and crop detection, crop yield monitoring, flood-prone area detection, pest disease monitoring, droughts prediction, soil content analysis and soil production capacity detection, and for monitoring the evolution of forests and vegetation. This review examines recent advancements in AI-driven classification techniques for various applications regarding agriculture and environmental monitoring to answer the following research questions: (1) What are the main problems that can be solved through incorporating AI-driven classification techniques into the field of smart agriculture and environmental monitoring? (2) What are the main methods and strategies used in this technology? (3) What type of data can be used in this regard? For this study, a systematic literature review approach was adopted, analyzing publications from Scopus and WoS (Web of Science) between 1 January 2020 and 31 December 2024. By synthesizing recent developments, this review provides valuable insights for researchers, highlighting the current trends, challenges and future research directions, in the context of achieving the Sustainable Development Goals. Full article
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24 pages, 1680 KB  
Review
Leveraging Artificial Intelligence for Sustainable Tutoring and Dropout Prevention in Higher Education: A Scoping Review on Digital Transformation
by Washington Raúl Fierro Saltos, Fabian Eduardo Fierro Saltos, Veloz Segura Elizabeth Alexandra and Edgar Fabián Rivera Guzmán
Information 2025, 16(9), 819; https://doi.org/10.3390/info16090819 - 22 Sep 2025
Viewed by 261
Abstract
The increasing integration of artificial intelligence into educational processes offers new opportunities to address critical issues in higher education, such as student dropout, academic underperformance, and the need for personalized tutoring. This scoping review aims to map the scientific literature on the use [...] Read more.
The increasing integration of artificial intelligence into educational processes offers new opportunities to address critical issues in higher education, such as student dropout, academic underperformance, and the need for personalized tutoring. This scoping review aims to map the scientific literature on the use of AI techniques to predict academic performance, risk of dropout, and the need for academic advising, with an emphasis on e-learning or technology-mediated environments. The study follows the Joanna Briggs Institute PCC strategy, and the review was reported following the PRISMA-ScR checklist for search reporting. A total of 63 peer-reviewed empirical studies (2019–2025) were included after systematic filtering from the Scopus and Web of Science databases. The findings reveal that supervised machine learning models, such as decision trees, random forests, and neural networks, dominate the field, with an emerging interest in deep learning, transfer learning, and explainable AI. Academic, behavioral, emotional, and contextual variables are integrated into increasingly complex and interpretable models. Most studies focus on undergraduate students in digital and hybrid learning contexts, particularly in regions with high dropout rates. The review highlights the potential of AI to enable early intervention and improve the effectiveness of tutoring systems, while noting limitations such as lack of model generalization and ethical concerns. Recommendations are provided for future research and institutional integration. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Real-World Applications of Machine Learning Techniques)
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25 pages, 11727 KB  
Article
An Interpretable Ensemble Learning Framework Based on Remote Sensing for Ecological–Geological Environment Evaluation: The Case of Laos
by Zhengyao Wang, Yunhui Kong, Keyan Xiao, Changjie Cao, Yunhe Li, Yixiao Wu, Miao Xie, Rui Tang, Cheng Li and Chengjie Gong
Remote Sens. 2025, 17(18), 3240; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17183240 - 19 Sep 2025
Viewed by 321
Abstract
As a critical ecological security barrier in the Indo-China Peninsula, the Lao People’s Democratic Republic (Lao PDR) is increasingly threatened by forest degradation, frequent geological hazards, and intensified anthropogenic disturbances. To address the urgent need for a scientific evaluation of eco-geological environmental quality, [...] Read more.
As a critical ecological security barrier in the Indo-China Peninsula, the Lao People’s Democratic Republic (Lao PDR) is increasingly threatened by forest degradation, frequent geological hazards, and intensified anthropogenic disturbances. To address the urgent need for a scientific evaluation of eco-geological environmental quality, this study develops a comprehensive assessment framework integrating multi-source remote sensing imagery, geological maps, and socio-economic datasets. A total of ten indicators were selected across four dimensions—geology, topography, ecology, and human activity. A stacking ensemble learning model was constructed by combining seven heterogeneous base classifiers—AdaBoost, KNN, Gradient Boosting, Random Forest, SVC, MLP, and XGBoost—with a logistic regression meta-learner. Model interpretability was enhanced using SHAP values to quantify the contribution of each input variable. The stacking model outperformed all individual models, achieving an accuracy of 91.14%, an F1 score of 93.62%, and an AUC of 95.05%. NDVI, GDP, and slope were identified as the most influential factors: vegetation coverage showed a strong positive relationship with environmental quality, while economic development intensity and steep terrain were associated with degradation. Spatial zoning results indicate that high-quality eco-geological zones are concentrated in the low-disturbance plains of the northeast and southeast, whereas vulnerable areas are primarily distributed around the Vientiane metropolitan region and tectonically active mountainous zones. This study offers a robust and interpretable methodological approach to support ecological diagnosis, zonal management, and sustainable development in tropical mountainous regions. Full article
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