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Search Results (1,668)

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24 pages, 2047 KB  
Article
Spatiotemporal Variations and Climatic Associations of Pocket Park Eco-Environmental Quality in Fuzhou, China (2019–2024)
by Hengping Lin, Changchun Qiu, Xianxi Chen, Shuhan Wu and Wei Shui
Forests 2026, 17(2), 166; https://doi.org/10.3390/f17020166 - 27 Jan 2026
Abstract
Accurately quantifying the ecological functions of small and micro green spaces in high density urban environments supports urban ecological planning and management. This study assessed 271 pocket parks in the main urban area of Fuzhou, China, using multi-source remote sensing data from the [...] Read more.
Accurately quantifying the ecological functions of small and micro green spaces in high density urban environments supports urban ecological planning and management. This study assessed 271 pocket parks in the main urban area of Fuzhou, China, using multi-source remote sensing data from the growing seasons of 2019 to 2024. Six indicators were derived, including NDVI, NPP, WET, NDBSI, ISI, and LST. A composite Eco-environmental Index (EEI) was constructed using the entropy weight method. We combined the coefficient of variation, Theil–Sen slope estimation, the Mann–Kendall test, and the Hurst exponent to quantify spatial heterogeneity, interannual stability, and short-term persistence. We also examined climatic associations using correlation analysis. Pocket parks consistently outperformed their surrounding 500 m buffers across all indicators, and park buffer contrasts increased for most indicators. The mean EEI significantly increased from 0.563 in 2019 to 0.650 in 2024, with a pronounced step increase around 2022. At the site level, 261 of 271 parks (96.3%) exhibited an upward trend in EEI, indicating widespread ecological improvement. Specifically, park vegetation greenness (NDVI) rose from 0.413 to 0.578, widening the gap with surrounding areas. Parks consistently maintained a lower land surface temperature (LST) than their buffers, with a cooling magnitude ranging from 3.5 °C to 4.6 °C. Precipitation was positively associated with NDVI and NPP, while LST was positively associated with air temperature and negatively associated with precipitation. These findings support the planning and adaptive management of pocket parks to strengthen urban ecological resilience. Full article
28 pages, 2082 KB  
Article
Detecting the Impacts of Climate and Hydrological Changes on the Lower Mekong River Based on Water Quality Variables: A Case Study of an An Giang, Vietnam
by Nguyen Xuan Lan, Pham Thi My Lan, Tran Van Ty, Nguyen Thanh Giao and Huynh Vuong Thu Minh
Earth 2026, 7(1), 16; https://doi.org/10.3390/earth7010016 - 26 Jan 2026
Viewed by 42
Abstract
This study evaluates the spatiotemporal variations in surface water quality in An Giang province, a key upstream region of the Vietnamese Mekong Delta (VMD), under the influence of hydrological alterations and climate change impacts. Water quality data from 2010 to 2023 were collected [...] Read more.
This study evaluates the spatiotemporal variations in surface water quality in An Giang province, a key upstream region of the Vietnamese Mekong Delta (VMD), under the influence of hydrological alterations and climate change impacts. Water quality data from 2010 to 2023 were collected from 10 monitoring stations along the Tien and Hau Rivers, focusing on key parameters including pH, temperature, Dissolved Oxygen (DO), Total Suspended Solids (TSS), Biological Oxygen Demand (BOD), Chemical Oxygen Demand (COD), Ammonium (N-NH4+), Nitrate (NO3), orthophosphate (P-PO43−), and Coliforms. The Mann–Kendall test and Sen’s slope estimator were employed to detect long-term trends and quantify the magnitude of changes. The findings indicated that the Hau River exhibits significant organic pollution, evidenced by elevated levels of BOD and COD, alongside diminished levels of DO. The Tien River exhibits elevated concentrations of NH4+ and total suspended solids (TSS). The MK test indicated that BOD, COD, and NH4+ levels were increasing at most locations in a statistically significant manner. This indicates that the water quality deteriorated over time. The study revealed that the majority of pollutants exhibited statistically significant increasing trends (p ≤ 0.05). The Tien River’s COD is increasing by 1.6 mg/L annually, whereas the Hau River’s COD is escalating by 1.7 mg/L per year. The biochemical oxygen demand on both rivers is increasing by 0.5 mg/L each year. The diminishing quantities of dissolved oxygen indicated a decline in water quality. Pollutant concentrations demonstrated significant positive associations with maximum temperature (r = 0.47–0.64) and hours of sunshine (r ≈ 0.50–0.64). A significant negative correlation with river discharge was observed, particularly during the dry season (r = −0.79 to −0.88), when diminished flows resulted in elevated pollution concentrations. The findings offer measurable evidence that increasing temperatures and decreasing river flows significantly affect water quality, underscoring the necessity of adapting water resource management in the Mekong Delta. Full article
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26 pages, 3272 KB  
Article
Ecological Change in Minnesota’s Carbon Sequestration and Oxygen Release Service: A Multidimensional Assessment Using Multi-Temporal Remote Sensing Data
by Donghui Shi
Remote Sens. 2026, 18(3), 391; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs18030391 - 23 Jan 2026
Viewed by 151
Abstract
Carbon sequestration and oxygen release (CSOR) are core regulating functions of terrestrial ecosystems. However, regional assessments often fail to (i) separate scale-driven high supply from per-area efficiency, (ii) detect structural instability and degradation risk from long-term trajectories, and (iii) provide evidence that is [...] Read more.
Carbon sequestration and oxygen release (CSOR) are core regulating functions of terrestrial ecosystems. However, regional assessments often fail to (i) separate scale-driven high supply from per-area efficiency, (ii) detect structural instability and degradation risk from long-term trajectories, and (iii) provide evidence that is comparable across units for management prioritization. Using Minnesota, USA, we integrated satellite-derived net primary productivity (NPP; 1998–2021) with a Quantity–Intensity–Structure (Q–I–S) framework to quantify CSOR, detect trends and change points (Mann–Kendall and Pettitt tests), map spatial clustering and degradation risk (Exploratory Spatial Data Analysis, ESDA), and attribute natural and human drivers (principal component regression and GeoDetector). CSOR increased overall from 1998 to 2021, with a marked shift around 2013 from a slight, variable decline to sustained recovery. Spatially, CSOR showed a persistent north–south gradient, with higher and improving services in northern Minnesota and lower, more degraded services in the south; persistent degradation was concentrated in a central high-risk belt. The Q–I–S framework also revealed inconsistencies between total supply and condition, identifying high-supply yet degrading areas and low-supply areas with recovery potential that are not evident from the totals alone. Climate variables primarily controlled CSOR quantity and structure, whereas human factors more strongly influenced intensity; the interactions of the two further shaped observed patterns. These results provide an interpretable and transferable basis for diagnosing degradation and prioritizing restoration under long-term environmental change. Full article
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30 pages, 25744 KB  
Article
Long-Term Dynamics and Transitions of Surface Water Extent in the Dryland Wetlands of Central Asia Using a Hybrid Ensemble–Occurrence Approach
by Kanchan Mishra, Hervé Piégay, Kathryn E. Fitzsimmons and Philip Weber
Remote Sens. 2026, 18(3), 383; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs18030383 - 23 Jan 2026
Viewed by 228
Abstract
Wetlands in dryland regions are rapidly degrading under the combined effects of climate change and human regulation, yet long-term, seasonally resolved assessments of surface water extent (SWE) and its dynamics remain scarce. Here, we map and analyze seasonal surface water extent (SWE) over [...] Read more.
Wetlands in dryland regions are rapidly degrading under the combined effects of climate change and human regulation, yet long-term, seasonally resolved assessments of surface water extent (SWE) and its dynamics remain scarce. Here, we map and analyze seasonal surface water extent (SWE) over the period 2000–2024 in the Ile River Delta (IRD), south-eastern Kazakhstan, using Landsat TM/ETM+/OLI data within the Google Earth Engine (GEE) framework. We integrate multiple indices using the modified Normalized Difference Water Index (mNDWI), Automated Water Extraction Index (AWEI) variants, Water Index 2015 (WI2015), and Multi-Band Water Index (MBWI) with dynamic Otsu thresholding. The resulting index-wise binary water maps are merged via ensemble agreement (intersection, majority, union) to delineate three SWE regimes: stable (persists most of the time), periodic (appears regularly but not in every season), and ephemeral (appears only occasionally). Validation against Sentinel-2 imagery showed high accuracy F1-Score/Overall accuracy (F1/OA ≈ 0.85/85%), confirming our workflow to be robust. Hydroclimatic drivers were evaluated through modified Mann–Kendall (MMK) and Spearman’s (r) correlations between SWE, discharge (D), water level (WL), precipitation (P), and air temperature (AT), while a hybrid ensemble–occurrence framework was applied to identify degradation and transition patterns. Trend analysis revealed significant long–term declines, most pronounced during summer and fall. Discharge is predominantly controlled by stable spring SWE, while discharge and temperature jointly influence periodic SWE in summer–fall, with warming reducing the delta surface water. Ephemeral SWE responds episodically to flow pulses, whereas precipitation played a limited role in this semi–arid region. Spatially, area(s) of interest (AOI)-II/III (the main distributary system) support the most extensive yet dynamic wetlands. In contrast, AOI-I and AOI-IV host smaller, more constrained wetland mosaics. AOI-I shows persistence under steady low flows, while AOI-IV reflects a stressed system with sporadic high-water levels. Overall, the results highlight the dominant influence of flow regulation and distributary allocation on IRD hydrology and the need for ecologically timed releases, targeted restoration, and transboundary cooperation to sustain delta resilience. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Remote Sensing in Geology, Geomorphology and Hydrology)
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22 pages, 1617 KB  
Article
Who Teaches Older Adults? Pedagogical and Digital Competence of Facilitators in Mexico and Spain
by Claudia Isabel Martínez-Alcalá, Julio Cabero-Almenara and Alejandra Rosales-Lagarde
Soc. Sci. 2026, 15(1), 47; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci15010047 - 16 Jan 2026
Viewed by 313
Abstract
Digital inclusion has become an essential component in ensuring the autonomy, social participation, and well-being of older adults. However, their learning of digital skills depends to a large extent on the quality of support provided by the facilitator, whose age, training, and experience [...] Read more.
Digital inclusion has become an essential component in ensuring the autonomy, social participation, and well-being of older adults. However, their learning of digital skills depends to a large extent on the quality of support provided by the facilitator, whose age, training, and experience directly influence teaching processes and how older adults relate to technology. This study compares the digital competences, and ICT skills of 107 facilitators of digital literacy programs, classified into three groups: peer educators (PEERS), young students without gerontological training (YOS), and young gerontology specialists (YGS). A quantitative design was used. Statistical analyses included non-parametric tests (Kruskal–Wallis, Mann–Whitney, Kendall’s Tau) and parametric tests (ANOVA, t-tests), to examine associations between socio-demographic variables, the level of digital competence, and ICT skills for teachers (technological and pedagogical). The results show clear differences between profiles. YOS achieved the highest scores in digital competence, especially in problem-solving and tool handling. The YGS achieved a balanced profile, combining competent levels of digital skills with pedagogical strengths linked to their gerontological training. In contrast, PEERS recorded the lowest levels of digital competence, particularly in security and information management; nevertheless, their role remains relevant for fostering trust and closeness in training processes among people of the same age. It was also found that educational level is positively associated with digital competence in all three profiles, while age showed a negative relationship only among PEERS. The findings highlight the importance of creating targeted training courses focusing on digital, technological, and pedagogical skills to ensure effective, tailored teaching methods for older adults. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Educational Technology for a Multimodal Society)
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15 pages, 250 KB  
Article
Perceived Effectiveness of Workplace Violence Prevention Strategies Among Bulgarian Healthcare Professionals: A Cross-Sectional Survey
by Nikolina Radeva, Maria Rohova, Anzhela Bakhova, Sirma Draganova and Atanas Zanev
Healthcare 2026, 14(2), 220; https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare14020220 - 15 Jan 2026
Viewed by 134
Abstract
Background: Workplace violence (WPV) is a pervasive occupational hazard in healthcare that undermines staff safety and quality of care. In Bulgaria, WPV remains widespread and underreported, despite recent legislative initiatives. This study assessed healthcare professionals’ perceptions of the effectiveness of WPV prevention strategies [...] Read more.
Background: Workplace violence (WPV) is a pervasive occupational hazard in healthcare that undermines staff safety and quality of care. In Bulgaria, WPV remains widespread and underreported, despite recent legislative initiatives. This study assessed healthcare professionals’ perceptions of the effectiveness of WPV prevention strategies and examined how prior exposure shapes these perceptions. Methods: A nationwide cross-sectional online survey was conducted in December 2024 with 944 healthcare professionals from multiple sectors. Participants rated the perceived effectiveness of 11 prevention strategies, including environmental/security measures, organizational, and national-level interventions, on a three-point scale. Friedman ANOVA with Kendall’s W assessed overall strategy rankings, while Mann–Whitney U tests with rank-biserial correlations compared specific effectiveness ratings between subgroups defined by WPV exposure (experienced or witnessed vs. not exposed in the previous 12 months). Results: In the previous 12 months, 34.7% of respondents reported direct WPV, and 43.4% had either experienced or witnessed incidents. Friedman ANOVA indicated significant differences in perceived effectiveness across strategies (Kendall’s W = 0.13), with stronger differentiation among violence-exposed respondents (W = 0.37) than among non-exposed respondents (W = 0.09). National-level interventions and security/response measures were consistently ranked the highest. Mann–Whitney tests showed significantly higher endorsement of most strategies among violence-exposed professionals, with large effect sizes for security measures and enforcement of sanctions. Conclusions: Bulgarian healthcare professionals view WPV prevention as requiring a multicomponent approach that integrates robust national policy with organizational and environmental measures. Direct exposure to violence is associated with stronger support for security-focused and national interventions. These findings inform context-specific, evidence-based WPV prevention programs for Bulgarian healthcare facilities. Full article
23 pages, 4850 KB  
Article
Multi-Dimensional Monitoring of Agricultural Drought at the Field Scale
by Yehao Wu, Liming Zhu, Maohua Ding and Lijie Shi
Agriculture 2026, 16(2), 227; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture16020227 - 15 Jan 2026
Viewed by 152
Abstract
The causes of agricultural drought are complex, and its actual occurrence process is often characterized by rapid onset in terms of time and small scale in terms of space. Monitoring agricultural drought using satellite remote sensing with low spatial resolution makes it difficult [...] Read more.
The causes of agricultural drought are complex, and its actual occurrence process is often characterized by rapid onset in terms of time and small scale in terms of space. Monitoring agricultural drought using satellite remote sensing with low spatial resolution makes it difficult to accurately capture the details of small-scale drought events. High-resolution satellite remote sensing has relatively long revisit cycles, making it difficult to capture the rapid evolution of drought conditions. Furthermore, the occurrence of agricultural drought is linked to multiple factors including precipitation, evapotranspiration, soil properties, and crop physiological characteristics. Consequently, relying on a single variable or indicator is insufficient for multidimensional monitoring of agricultural drought. This study takes Hebi City, Henan Province as the research area. It uses Sentinel-1 satellite data (HV, VV), Sentinel-2 data (NDVI, B2, B11), elevation, slope, aspect, and GPM precipitation data from 2019 to 2024 as independent variables. Three machine learning algorithms—Random Forest (RF), Random Forest-Recursive Feature Elimination (RF-RFE), and eXtreme Gradient Boosting (XGBoost)—were employed to construct a multi-dimensional agricultural drought monitoring model at the field scale. Additionally, the study verified the sensitivity of different environmental variables to agricultural drought monitoring and analyzed the accuracy performance of different machine learning algorithms in agricultural drought monitoring. The research results indicate that under the condition of full-factor input, all three models exhibit the optimal predictive performance. Among them, the XGBoost model performs the best, with the smallest Relative Root Mean Square Error (RRMSE) of 0.45 and the highest Correlation Coefficient (R) of 0.79. The absence of Digital Elevation Model (DEM) data impairs the models’ ability to capture the patterns of key features, which in turn leads to a reduction in predictive accuracy. Meanwhile, there is a significant correlation between model performance and sample size. Ultimately, the constructed XGBoost model takes the lead with an accuracy of 89%, while the accuracies of Random Forest (RF) and Random Forest-Recursive Feature Elimination (RF-RFE) are 88% and 86%, respectively. Based on these three drought monitoring models, this study further monitored a drought event that occurred in Hebi City in 2023, presented the spatiotemporal distribution of agricultural drought in Hebi City, and applied the Mann–Kendall test for time series analysis, aiming to identify the abrupt change process of agricultural drought. Meanwhile, on the basis of the research results, the feasibility of verifying drought occurrence using irrigation signals was discussed, and the potential reasons for the significantly lower drought occurrence probability in the western mountainous areas of the study region were analyzed. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Artificial Intelligence and Digital Agriculture)
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27 pages, 21198 KB  
Article
Impacts of Climate Change, Human Activities, and Their Interactions on China’s Gross Primary Productivity
by Yiwei Diao, Jie Lai, Lijun Huang, Anzhi Wang, Jiabing Wu, Yage Liu, Lidu Shen, Yuan Zhang, Rongrong Cai, Wenli Fei and Hao Zhou
Remote Sens. 2026, 18(2), 275; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs18020275 - 14 Jan 2026
Viewed by 306
Abstract
Gross Primary Productivity (GPP) plays a vital role in the terrestrial carbon cycle and ecosystem functioning. Understanding its spatio-temporal dynamics and driving mechanisms is critical for predicting ecosystem responses to climate change. China’s GPP has experienced complex responses due to heterogeneous climate, environment, [...] Read more.
Gross Primary Productivity (GPP) plays a vital role in the terrestrial carbon cycle and ecosystem functioning. Understanding its spatio-temporal dynamics and driving mechanisms is critical for predicting ecosystem responses to climate change. China’s GPP has experienced complex responses due to heterogeneous climate, environment, and human activities, yet their impacts and interactions across ecosystems remain unquantified. This study used the Mann–Kendall test and SHapley Additive exPlanations to quantify the contributions and interactions of climate, vegetation, topography, and human factors using GPP data (2001–2020). Nationally, GPP showed a significant upward trend, particularly in deciduous broadleaf forests, croplands, grasslands, and savannas. Leaf area index (LAI) is identified as the primary contributor to GPP variations, while climate factors exhibit nonlinear interactive effects on the modeled GPP. Ecosystem-specific sensitivities were evident: forest GPP is predominantly associated with climate–vegetation coupling. Additionally, in coniferous forests, the interaction between anthropogenic factors and topography shows a notable association with productivity patterns. Grassland GPP is primarily linked to topography, while cropland GPP is mainly related to management practices and environmental conditions. In contrast, the GPP of savannas and shrublands is less influenced by factor interactions. These findings high-light the necessity of ecosystem-specific management and restoration strategies and provide a basis for improving carbon cycle modeling and climate change adaptation planning. Full article
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16 pages, 6107 KB  
Data Descriptor
Actual Evapotranspiration Dataset of Mongolia Plateau from 2001 to 2020 Based on SFE-NP Model
by Yuhui Su, Juanle Wang and Baomin Han
Data 2026, 11(1), 20; https://doi.org/10.3390/data11010020 - 13 Jan 2026
Viewed by 140
Abstract
Evapotranspiration (ET) refers to the total water vapor flux transported by vegetation and surface soil to the atmosphere. It is an important component of water and heat regulation, and has an impact on plant productivity and water resource management. As a water-shortage region, [...] Read more.
Evapotranspiration (ET) refers to the total water vapor flux transported by vegetation and surface soil to the atmosphere. It is an important component of water and heat regulation, and has an impact on plant productivity and water resource management. As a water-shortage region, the Mongolian Plateau is characterized by drought and an uneven distribution of rainwater resources. Understanding the spatiotemporal distribution characteristics of ET on the Mongolian Plateau is important for water resource regulation for climate change adaption and regional sustainable development. This study calculated the spatiotemporal distribution characteristics of the actual ET in the Mongolian Plateau based on the SFE-NP model and generated a surface ET dataset with a spatial resolution of 1 km and monthly temporal resolution from 2001 to 2020. Theil-Sen median and Mann–Kendall trend models were used to analyze the temporal and spatial distribution characteristics of the actual ET over the Mongolian Plateau. This dataset has been validated for accuracy against the commonly used authoritative ET datasets ERA5_Land and MOD16A2, demonstrating high precision and accuracy. This dataset can provide data support for research and applications such as surface water resource allocation and drought detection in the Mongolian Plateau. Full article
(This article belongs to the Collection Modern Geophysical and Climate Data Analysis: Tools and Methods)
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17 pages, 4787 KB  
Article
Lagged Vegetation Responses to Diurnal Asymmetric Warming and Precipitation During the Growing Season in the Yellow River Basin: Patterns and Driving Mechanisms
by Zeyu Zhang, Fengman Fang and Zhiming Zhang
Land 2026, 15(1), 146; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15010146 - 10 Jan 2026
Viewed by 195
Abstract
Diurnally asymmetric warming under global climate change is reshaping terrestrial ecosystems, with important implications for vegetation productivity, biodiversity, and carbon sequestration. However, the mechanisms underlying the delayed and differentiated vegetation responses to daytime and nighttime warming, particularly under interacting precipitation regimes, remain insufficiently [...] Read more.
Diurnally asymmetric warming under global climate change is reshaping terrestrial ecosystems, with important implications for vegetation productivity, biodiversity, and carbon sequestration. However, the mechanisms underlying the delayed and differentiated vegetation responses to daytime and nighttime warming, particularly under interacting precipitation regimes, remain insufficiently understood, limiting accurate assessments of ecosystem resilience under future climate scenarios. Clarifying how vegetation responds dynamically to asymmetric temperature changes and precipitation, including their lagged effects, is therefore essential. Here, we analyzed the spatiotemporal evolution of growing-season Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) across the Yellow River Basin from 2001 to 2022 using Theil–Sen median trend estimation and the Mann–Kendall test. We further quantified the lagged responses of NDVI to daytime maximum temperature (Tmax), nighttime minimum temperature (Tmin), and precipitation, and identified their dominant controls using partial correlation analysis and an XGBoost–SHAP framework. Results show that (1) growing-season climate in the YRB experienced pronounced diurnal warming asymmetry: Tmax, Tmin, and precipitation all increased, but Tmin rose substantially faster than Tmax. (2) NDVI exhibited an overall increasing trend, with declines confined to only 2.72% of the basin, mainly in Inner Mongolia, Ningxia, and Qinghai. (3) NDVI responded to Tmax, Tmin, and precipitation with distinct lag times, averaging 43, 16, and 42 days, respectively. (4) Lag times were strongly modulated by topography, soil properties, and hydro-climatic background. Specifically, Tmax lag time shortened with increasing elevation, soil silt content, and slope, while showing a decrease-then-increase pattern with potential evapotranspiration. Tmin lag time lengthened with elevation, soil sand content, and soil pH, but shortened with higher potential evapotranspiration. Precipitation lag time increased with soil silt content and net primary productivity, decreased with soil pH, and varied nonlinearly with elevation (decrease then increase). By explicitly linking diurnal warming asymmetry to vegetation response lags and their environmental controls, this study advances process-based understanding of climate–vegetation interactions in arid and semi-arid regions. The findings provide a transferable framework for improving ecosystem vulnerability assessments and informing adaptive vegetation management and conservation strategies under ongoing asymmetric warming. Full article
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24 pages, 10050 KB  
Article
Temporal and Spatial Variation Pattern of Groundwater Storage and Response to Environmental Changes in Shandong Province
by Yanyang Bi and Xiucui Tan
Water 2026, 18(2), 189; https://doi.org/10.3390/w18020189 - 10 Jan 2026
Viewed by 246
Abstract
Based on GRACE RL06 data, this study reconstructs a monthly Terrestrial Water Storage Anomaly (TWSA) series in Shandong Province (2003–2024) using Singular Spectrum Analysis (SSA) and derives Groundwater Storage Anomaly (GWSA) via the water balance equation. The spatiotemporal evolution characteristics of GWSA were [...] Read more.
Based on GRACE RL06 data, this study reconstructs a monthly Terrestrial Water Storage Anomaly (TWSA) series in Shandong Province (2003–2024) using Singular Spectrum Analysis (SSA) and derives Groundwater Storage Anomaly (GWSA) via the water balance equation. The spatiotemporal evolution characteristics of GWSA were systematically examined, and the relative contributions of climatic factors and human activities to groundwater storage changes were quantitatively assessed, with the aim of contributing to the development, utilization, and protection of groundwater in Shandong Province. The results indicate that temporally, GWSA in Shandong Province exhibited a statistically significant decreasing trend at a rate of −8.45 mm/a (p < 0.01). The maximum GWSA value of 17.15 mm was recorded in 2006, while the Mann–Kendall abrupt change-point analysis identified 2013 as a significant transition point. Following this abrupt change, GWSA demonstrated a persistent decline, reaching the minimum annual average of −225.78 mm in 2020. Although moderate recovery was observed after 2020, GWSA values remained substantially lower than those in the pre-abrupt change period. Seasonal analysis revealed a distinct “higher in autumn and lower in spring” pattern, with the most pronounced fluctuations occurring in summer and the most stable conditions in winter. Spatially, approximately 99.1% of the study area showed significant decreasing trends, displaying a clear east–west gradient with more severe depletion in inland regions compared to relatively stable coastal areas. Crucially, human activities emerged as the dominant driving factor, with an average contribution rate of 86.11% during 2003–2024. The areal proportion where human activities served as the decisive factor (contribution rate > 80%) increased dramatically to 99.58%. Furthermore, the impact of human activities demonstrated bidirectional characteristics, transitioning from negative influences during the depletion phase to positive contributions promoting groundwater recovery in recent years. At present, the GWSA in Shandong Province is expected to continue declining in the future, with an overall downward trend. Countermeasures must be implemented promptly. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Hydrology)
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18 pages, 8939 KB  
Article
Research on the Temporal and Spatial Evolution Patterns of Vegetation Cover in Zhaogu Mining Area Based on kNDVI
by Congying Liu, Hebing Zhang, Zhichao Chen, He Qin, Xueqing Liu and Yiheng Jiao
Appl. Sci. 2026, 16(2), 681; https://doi.org/10.3390/app16020681 - 8 Jan 2026
Viewed by 244
Abstract
Extensive coal mining activities can exert substantial negative impacts on surface ecosystems. Vegetation indices are widely recognized as effective indicators of land ecological conditions and provide valuable insights into long-term ecological changes in mining areas. In this study, the Zhaogu mining area of [...] Read more.
Extensive coal mining activities can exert substantial negative impacts on surface ecosystems. Vegetation indices are widely recognized as effective indicators of land ecological conditions and provide valuable insights into long-term ecological changes in mining areas. In this study, the Zhaogu mining area of the Jiaozuo Coalfield was selected as the study site. Using the Google Earth Engine (GEE) platform, the Kernel Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (kNDVI) was constructed to generate a vegetation dataset covering the period from 2010 to 2024. The temporal dynamics and future trends of vegetation coverage were analyzed using Theil–Sen median trend analysis, the Mann–Kendall test, the Hurst index, and residual analysis. Furthermore, the relative contributions of climatic factors and human activities to vegetation changes were quantitatively assessed. The results indicate that: (1) vegetation coverage in the Zhaogu mining area exhibits an overall improving trend, affecting approximately 77.1% of the study area, while slight degradation is mainly concentrated in the southeastern region, accounting for about 15.2%; (2) vegetation dynamics are predominantly characterized by low and relatively low fluctuations, covering approximately 78.5% of the region, whereas areas with high fluctuations are limited and mainly distributed in zones with intensive mining activities; although the current vegetation trend is generally increasing, future projections suggest a potential decline in approximately 55.8% of the area; and (3) vegetation changes in the Zhaogu mining area are jointly influenced by climatic factors and human activities, with climatic factors promoting vegetation growth in approximately 70.6% of the study area, while human activities exert inhibitory effects in about 24.2%, particularly in regions affected by mining operations and urban expansion. Full article
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17 pages, 4233 KB  
Article
Assessment of Long-Term Land Cover and Vegetation Trends Using NDVI and CORINE Data: A Case Study from Slovakia
by Stefan Kuzevic, Diana Bobikova and Zofia Kuzevicova
Sustainability 2026, 18(2), 663; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18020663 - 8 Jan 2026
Viewed by 204
Abstract
The study and understanding of spatial and temporal changes in the landscape is essential for assessing environmental trends and predicting future developments in the area. Changes in land cover and vegetation dynamics are key indicators of the ecological stability of an area. This [...] Read more.
The study and understanding of spatial and temporal changes in the landscape is essential for assessing environmental trends and predicting future developments in the area. Changes in land cover and vegetation dynamics are key indicators of the ecological stability of an area. This study analyzes long-term changes in land cover and vegetation dynamics in Jelšava and neighboring municipalities. The selected area has long been classified as one of the areas with poor air quality in Slovakia. The analysis is based on data from the CORINE Land Cover program for the period 1990–2018 and Landsat data from 1990 to 2025. The condition and vitality of vegetation were assessed using the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI), while temporal trends were assessed using non-parametric Mann–Kendall and Sen’s slope tests. The results show a decrease in the area of class 31—Forests between 2012 and 2018, accompanied by an increase in the area of class 324—Transitional woodland–shrub. Analysis of the NDVI confirmed a slightly positive trend in vegetation cover development, with statistically significant growth (p < 0.05) recorded on approximately 43% of the territory. The combination of remote sensing data and spatial analysis in a GIS environment has proven to be an effective approach to monitoring ecological dynamics and provides valuable insights for regional environmental management and sustainable land use planning. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sustainable Forestry)
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25 pages, 16788 KB  
Article
Spatiotemporal Characteristics and Possible Causes of the Collapse of the Northern Hemisphere Polar Vortex
by Jinqi Li, Yu Zhang and Yaohui Li
Atmosphere 2026, 17(1), 69; https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos17010069 - 7 Jan 2026
Viewed by 403
Abstract
Changes in atmospheric circulation can be influenced by the collapse characteristics of the polar vortex, a significant system in the Northern Hemisphere. This study reveals the spatiotemporal evolution and causative mechanisms of the collapse of the Northern Hemisphere polar vortex, as well as [...] Read more.
Changes in atmospheric circulation can be influenced by the collapse characteristics of the polar vortex, a significant system in the Northern Hemisphere. This study reveals the spatiotemporal evolution and causative mechanisms of the collapse of the Northern Hemisphere polar vortex, as well as the polar vortex collapse criteria, Mann–Kendall test, mutation year extraction, and physical mechanism analyses, based on the fifth-generation European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) atmospheric reanalysis of the global climate (ERA5) data for 1980–2024. The main conclusions are as follows: (1) The collapse events, which primarily occurred in spring, and the collapse time exhibited a U-shaped trend. (2) The collapse period exhibited significant spatiotemporal nonuniformity, with shorter periods in 10–100 hPa, larger variations in 100–300 hPa, and longer periods in 300–500 hPa. (3) The collapse mutation propagated downward to lower layers, beginning in 10–30 hPa and concentrating between 1995 and 2005. (4) The momentum flux and heat flux exhibit meridionally concentrated structures in the middle–lower stratosphere. The transition layer forms a region of momentum and energy accumulation. In the lower levels, the heat flux weakens. (5) The polar vortex collapse results from enhanced lower-stratospheric instability, weakened transition-layer disturbances, and upward energy transfer from low-level convergence, together forming a characteristic U-shaped collapse structure. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Climatology)
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Article
Dynamics of Key Meteorological Variables and Their Impacts on Staple Crop Yields Across Large-Scale Farms in Heilongjiang, China
by Jingyang Li, Huanhuan Li, Xin Liu, Qiuju Wang, Qingying Meng, Jiahe Zou, Yifei Luo, Shuangchao Wang and Long Tan
Agriculture 2026, 16(2), 143; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture16020143 - 6 Jan 2026
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Abstract
Against the backdrop of global warming and a reshaped hydrothermal regime, the albic soil belt of the Sanjiang Plain, a major grain base, requires farm-scale evidence of how meteorological variability couples with staple-crop yields. Using meteorological and yield records from 2000 to 2023 [...] Read more.
Against the backdrop of global warming and a reshaped hydrothermal regime, the albic soil belt of the Sanjiang Plain, a major grain base, requires farm-scale evidence of how meteorological variability couples with staple-crop yields. Using meteorological and yield records from 2000 to 2023 at three large farms (859, 850, and 852), this study applied the Mann–Kendall test, wavelet and cross-wavelet coherence, Pearson correlation, gray relational analysis, and principal component analysis to track the evolution of air temperature, precipitation, evaporation, sunshine duration, relative humidity, and surface temperature, and to assess their multi-scale impacts on rice, corn, and soybean yields. The region warmed and became wetter overall, with dominant periodicities near 21a and 8a. Across the three farms, yields were significantly and positively associated with precipitation and air temperature (R > 0.60). Rice yield correlated strongly and negatively with evaporation at Farm 850 (R = −0.61) and at Farm 852 (R = −0.503). At Farm 859, gray relational analysis ranked precipitation highest for rice, corn, and soybean (γ = 0.853, 0.844, and 0.826), followed by air temperature. The first two principal components explained 67.66% of the variance; PC1 (41.80%) loaded positively for air temperature, and PC2 (25.86%) for precipitation and relative humidity. Cross-wavelet coherence indicated stable coupling between yields and hydrothermal variables, with the strongest coupling for rice with precipitation and air temperature, prominent coupling for corn with air temperature and sunshine duration, and stage-dependent responses of soybean to precipitation and evaporation. These results show that long-term trends together with phase-specific oscillations jointly shape yield variability. The findings support translating phase identification and sensitive windows into crop-specific rules for sowing or transplanting arrangements, irrigation timing, and early warning, providing a quantitative basis for climate-adaptive management on the study farms and, where soils, management, and microclimate are comparable, for the wider Sanjiang Plain. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Ecosystem, Environment and Climate Change in Agriculture)
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