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L’interface de recherche est composée de trois sections : Rechercher, Explorer et Résultats. Celles-ci sont décrites en détail ci-dessous.

Vous pouvez lancer une recherche aussi bien à partir de la section Rechercher qu’à partir de la section Explorer.

Rechercher

Cette section affiche vos critères de recherche courants et vous permet de soumettre des mots-clés à chercher dans la bibliographie.

  • Chaque nouvelle soumission ajoute les mots-clés saisis à la liste des critères de recherche.
  • Pour lancer une nouvelle recherche plutôt qu’ajouter des mots-clés à la recherche courante, utilisez le bouton Réinitialiser la recherche, puis entrez vos mots-clés.
  • Pour remplacer un mot-clé déjà soumis, veuillez d’abord le retirer en décochant sa case à cocher, puis soumettre un nouveau mot-clé.
  • Vous pouvez contrôler la portée de votre recherche en choisissant où chercher. Les options sont :
    • Partout : repère vos mots-clés dans tous les champs des références bibliographiques ainsi que dans le contenu textuel des documents disponibles.
    • Dans les auteurs ou contributeurs : repère vos mots-clés dans les noms d’auteurs ou de contributeurs.
    • Dans les titres : repère vos mots-clés dans les titres.
    • Dans les années de publication : repère vos mots-clés dans le champ d’année de publication (vous pouvez utiliser l’opérateur OU avec vos mots-clés pour trouver des références ayant différentes années de publication. Par exemple, 2020 OU 2021).
    • Dans tous les champs : repère vos mots-clés dans tous les champs des notices bibliographiques.
    • Dans les documents : repère vos mots-clés dans le contenu textuel des documents disponibles.
  • Vous pouvez utiliser les opérateurs booléens avec vos mots-clés :
    • ET : repère les références qui contiennent tous les termes fournis. Ceci est la relation par défaut entre les termes séparés d’un espace. Par exemple, a b est équivalent à a ET b.
    • OU : repère les références qui contiennent n’importe lequel des termes fournis. Par exemple, a OU b.
    • SAUF : exclut les références qui contiennent le terme fourni. Par exemple, SAUF a.
    • Les opérateurs booléens doivent être saisis en MAJUSCULES.
  • Vous pouvez faire des groupements logiques (avec les parenthèses) pour éviter les ambiguïtés lors de la combinaison de plusieurs opérateurs booléens. Par exemple, (a OU b) ET c.
  • Vous pouvez demander une séquence exacte de mots (avec les guillemets droits), par exemple "a b c". Par défaut la différence entre les positions des mots est de 1, ce qui signifie qu’une référence sera repérée si elle contient les mots et qu’ils sont consécutifs. Une distance maximale différente peut être fournie (avec le tilde), par exemple "a b"~2 permet jusqu’à un terme entre a et b, ce qui signifie que la séquence a c b pourrait être repérée aussi bien que a b.
  • Vous pouvez préciser que certains termes sont plus importants que d’autres (avec l’accent circonflexe). Par exemple, a^2 b c^0.5 indique que a est deux fois plus important que b dans le calcul de pertinence des résultats, tandis que c est de moitié moins important. Ce type de facteur peut être appliqué à un groupement logique, par exemple (a b)^3 c.
  • La recherche par mots-clés est insensible à la casse et les accents et la ponctuation sont ignorés.
  • Les terminaisons des mots sont amputées pour la plupart des champs, tels le titre, le résumé et les notes. L’amputation des terminaisons vous évite d’avoir à prévoir toutes les formes possibles d’un mot dans vos recherches. Ainsi, les termes municipal, municipale et municipaux, par exemple, donneront tous le même résultat. L’amputation des terminaisons n’est pas appliquée au texte des champs de noms, tels auteurs/contributeurs, éditeur, publication.

Explorer

Cette section vous permet d’explorer les catégories associées aux références.

  • Les catégories peuvent servir à affiner votre recherche. Cochez une catégorie pour l’ajouter à vos critères de recherche. Les résultats seront alors restreints aux références qui sont associées à cette catégorie.
  • Dé-cochez une catégorie pour la retirer de vos critères de recherche et élargir votre recherche.
  • Les nombres affichés à côté des catégories indiquent combien de références sont associées à chaque catégorie considérant les résultats de recherche courants. Ces nombres varieront en fonction de vos critères de recherche, de manière à toujours décrire le jeu de résultats courant. De même, des catégories et des facettes entières pourront disparaître lorsque les résultats de recherche ne contiennent aucune référence leur étant associées.
  • Une icône de flèche () apparaissant à côté d’une catégorie indique que des sous-catégories sont disponibles. Vous pouvez appuyer sur l’icône pour faire afficher la liste de ces catégories plus spécifiques. Par la suite, vous pouvez appuyer à nouveau pour masquer la liste. L’action d’afficher ou de masquer les sous-catégories ne modifie pas vos critères de recherche; ceci vous permet de rapidement explorer l’arborescence des catégories, si désiré.

Résultats

Cette section présente les résultats de recherche. Si aucun critère de recherche n’a été fourni, elle montre toute la bibliographie (jusqu’à 20 références par page).

  • Chaque référence de la liste des résultats est un hyperlien vers sa notice bibliographique complète. À partir de la notice, vous pouvez continuer à explorer les résultats de recherche en naviguant vers les notices précédentes ou suivantes de vos résultats de recherche, ou encore retourner à la liste des résultats.
  • Des hyperliens supplémentaires, tels que Consulter le document ou Consulter sur [nom d’un site web], peuvent apparaître sous un résultat de recherche. Ces liens vous fournissent un accès rapide à la ressource, des liens que vous trouverez également dans la notice bibliographique.
  • Le bouton Résumés vous permet d’activer ou de désactiver l’affichage des résumés dans la liste des résultats de recherche. Toutefois, activer l’affichage des résumés n’aura aucun effet sur les résultats pour lesquels aucun résumé n’est disponible.
  • Diverses options sont fournies pour permettre de contrôler l’ordonnancement les résultats de recherche. L’une d’elles est l’option de tri par Pertinence, qui classe les résultats du plus pertinent au moins pertinent. Le score utilisé à cette fin prend en compte la fréquence des mots ainsi que les champs dans lesquels ils apparaissent. Par exemple, si un terme recherché apparaît fréquemment dans une référence ou est l’un d’un très petit nombre de termes utilisé dans cette référence, cette référence aura probablement un score plus élevé qu’une autre où le terme apparaît moins fréquemment ou qui contient un très grand nombre de mots. De même, le score sera plus élevé si un terme est rare dans l’ensemble de la bibliographie que s’il est très commun. De plus, si un terme de recherche apparaît par exemple dans le titre d’une référence, le score de cette référence sera plus élevé que s’il apparaissait dans un champ moins important tel le résumé.
  • Le tri par Pertinence n’est disponible qu’après avoir soumis des mots-clés par le biais de la section Rechercher.
  • Les catégories sélectionnées dans la section Explorer n’ont aucun effet sur le tri par pertinence. Elles ne font que filtrer la liste des résultats.
Secteurs et disciplines
  • Société et Culture
Année de publication
  • Entre 2000 et 2025

Résultats 547 ressources

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Résumés
  • Ahmad, M. I., Shen, Q., Boota, M. W., Liu, R., & Ma, H. (2025). Natural Disasters and Rehabilitation: Post‐Disaster Aid, Corruption, Misallocation, and Mistargeting. Sustainable Development, sd.70225. https://doi.org/10.1002/sd.70225

    ABSTRACT The increasing frequency of natural disasters, such as floods, droughts, and tsunamis, has made vulnerable communities less resilient, pushing them toward long‐term poverty and food insecurity. Effective post‐disaster rehabilitation is critical to restoring livelihoods, infrastructure, and food security. However, challenges such as corruption, misallocation, and mistargeting undermine post‐disaster aid programs. This study systematically reviews 86 peer‐reviewed articles (1990–2023) using the preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta‐analyses (PRISMA) protocol to investigate aid inefficiencies in disaster recovery. The findings reveal that aid often fails to reach the most affected communities, being diverted to unaffected areas due to political influence and local elites, exacerbating inequalities. Corruption further hampers institutional performance and long‐term disaster resilience efforts. The study calls for transparent, accountable, and inclusive strategies for aid distribution, aligning with SDG 10 (reduced inequalities) and SDG 11 (sustainable cities and communities). Future research should focus on gender‐sensitive strategies, local governance, and technological innovations to enhance aid transparency and effectiveness.

    Consulter sur onlinelibrary.wiley.com
  • Rückle, K., Rohrer, M., Mihók, B., Johansson, M., Andersson, H., Pomee, M. S., Vergadi, E., Rouva, G., Agrawal, A., Balázs, B., Brattich, E., Carelli, M., De Luca, C., Di Sabatino, S., Krishnan V, S., Molter, A., Pilla, F., Ruggieri, P., Scolobig, A., & Hertig, E. (2025). Determinants and relationships of climate change, climate change hazards, mental health, and well-being: a systematic review. Frontiers in Psychiatry, 16, 1601871. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2025.1601871

    Introduction Impacts of climate change on human health receive increasing attention. However, the connections of climate change with well-being and mental health are still poorly understood. Objective As part of the Horizon Europe project TRIGGER, we aim to deepen the understanding of the relationships between climate change and human mental health and well-being in Europe by focusing on environmental and socio-individual determinants. Methods This study is a systematic literature review based on the PRISMA guidelines using Embase, Medline and Web of Science. Results 143 records were retrieved. The results show that climate change and its specific hazards (air pollution, floods, wildfires, meteorological variables, and temperature extremes) impact human well-being and mental health. Discussion Mental health and well-being outcomes are complex, extremely individual, and can be long lasting. Determinants like the living surrounding, human’s life activities as well as socio-individual determinants alter the linkage between climate change and mental health. The same determinant can exert both a pathogenic and a salutogenic effect, depending on the outcome. Knowing the effects of the determinants is of high relevance to improve resilience. Several pathways were identified. For instance, higher level of education and female gender lead to perceiving climate change as a bigger threat but increase preparedness to climate hazards. Elderly, children and adolescents are at higher risks of mental health problems. On the other hand, social relation, cohesiveness and support from family and friends are generally protective. Green and blue spaces improve well-being and mental health. Overall, comparing the different hazard-outcome relationships is difficult due to varying definitions, measurement techniques, spatial and temporal range, scales, indicators and population samples. Systematic Review Registration https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO/home , identifier CRD42023426758.

    Consulter sur www.frontiersin.org
  • Nkolokosa, C., Chirombo, J., Jones, C. M., Mbewe, R. B., Kambewa, E. A., Makaula, P., Tangena, J.-A. A., & Stothard, J. R. (2025). Predicting current habitat suitability for intermediate snail hosts of urogenital and intestinal schistosomiasis in the Lower Shire Valley floodplain of southern Malawi. Parasites & Vectors, 18(1), 368. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13071-025-06952-3

    Abstract Background Relating the geographical distribution of intermediate freshwater snail hosts (viz. vectors of schistosomes) to local environmental attributes offers value for understanding the epidemiological landscape of schistosomiasis transmission in a changing aquatic environment. Schistosomiasis—both urogenital and intestinal—causes significant human suffering, affecting approximately 240 million people globally and grouped within the neglected tropical disease (NTD) umbrella. This study addresses the following questions: 1. Where are the most suitable habitats for intermediate host snails in the Lower Shire Valley (LSV) in Malawi? 2. Which environmental factors are strongly associated with the geographical distribution of such snails in the LSV? Methods This paper presents the first species distribution models (SDMs) for intermediate snail hosts for urogenital and intestinal schistosomiasis in Chikwawa and Nsanje Districts, which together form the LSV). The SDMs developed for this study are ensemble machine learning approaches based on Random Forest (RF), Support Vector Machines (SVM), and multilayer perceptron (MLP) and are specific to the Bulinus africanus group and Biomphalaria pfeifferi . The former transmits urogenital schistosomiasis ( Schistosoma haematobium ), while the latter transmits intestinal schistosomiasis ( Schistosoma mansoni ). Results The SDMs reveal the following: 1) currently, Bu. africanus group not only has a wide distribution across central Chikwawa and eastern Nsanje but is also concentrated in floodplains, and the LSV has few habitats that can support Bi. pfeifferi , and 2) vegetation cover is the most important predictor of Bu. africanus group distribution, whereas precipitation variables are most important for Bi. pfeifferi in the LSV. Thus, Bu. africanus group habitat is the most dominant and abundant, while Bi. pfeifferi suitable habitat is patchy and scarce. Conclusion The distribution of suitable habitats for potential urogenital and intestinal schistosomiasis transmission across LSV is not uniform and typically non-overlapping. Understanding the spatial and temporal distributions of these snails is important for controlling and eliminating schistosomiasis. Graphical Abstract

    Consulter sur parasitesandvectors.biomedcentral.com
  • Hill, B., Marjoribanks, T., Moore, H., Bosher, L., & Gussy, M. (2025). Market-based instruments to fund nature-based solutions for flood risk management can disproportionately benefit affluent areas. Communications Earth & Environment, 6(1), 714. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-025-02706-2

    Abstract Market-based instruments, including competitive tenders, are central to funding global environmental restoration and management projects. Recently, tenders have been utilised to fund Nature-based Solutions schemes for Natural Flood Management, with the explicit purpose of achieving co-benefits; flood management and reducing inequities. While multiple studies consider the efficacy of Nature-based Solutions for tackling inequities, no prior research has quantified whether the resource allocation for these projects has been conducted equitably. We analyse two national natural flood management programmes funded through competitive tenders in England to explore who benefits by considering the characteristics of projects, including socio-economic, geographical (e.g. rurality) and flood risk dynamics. Our results suggest that inequity occurs at both the application and funding stages of Nature-based Solutions projects for flood risk management. This reflects wider international challenges of using market-based instruments for environmental resource allocation. Competitive tenders have the potential to undermine the equitable benefits of Nature-based Solutions.

    Consulter sur www.nature.com
  • Zhang, J., Chu, C., & Wang, P. (2025). Research on Extreme Precipitation Risk Considering Physical-social-environmental Attributes. Journal of Disaster Prevention and Mitigation Engineering, 45(4), 736–744. https://doi.org/10.13409/j.cnki.jdpme.20241220001

    This study aims to conduct a grid-scale extreme precipitation risk assessment in Xuanwu District, Nanjing, so as to fill the gaps in existing indicator systems and improve the precision of risk characterization. By integrating physical, social, and environmental indicators, a risk assessment framework was constructed to comprehensively represent the characteristics of extreme precipitation risk. This study applied the entropy weight method to calculate indicator weights, combined with ArcGIS technology and the K-means clustering algorithm, to analyze the spatial distribution characteristics of risk under a 100-year extreme precipitation scenario and to identify key influencing indicators across different risk levels. The results showed that extreme precipitation risk levels in Xuanwu District exhibited significant spatial heterogeneity, with an overall distribution pattern of low risk in the central area and high risk in the surrounding areas. The influence mechanisms of key indicators showed tiered response characteristics: the low-risk areas were mainly controlled by the submerged areas of urban and rural, industrial and mining, and residential lands, water body area, soil erosion level, and normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI). The medium-risk areas were influenced by the submerged areas of urban and rural, industrial and mining, residential lands, the submerged areas of forest land, emergency service response time to disaster-affected areas, soil erosion level, and NDVI. The high-risk areas were jointly dominated by the submerged areas of urban and rural, industrial and mining, residential lands, the submerged areas of forest land, and NDVI. The extremely high-risk areas were driven by three factors—the submerged areas of forest land, emergency service response time to disaster-affected areas, and the proportion of the largest patch to the landscape area. This study improves the indicator system for extreme precipitation risk assessment and clarifies the tiered response patterns of risk-driving indicators, providing a scientific basis for developing differentiated flood control strategies in Xuanwu District while offering important theoretical support for improving regional flood disaster resilience. © 2025 Editorial Office of Journal of Disaster Prevention and Mitigation Engineering. All rights reserved.

  • Wang, S., & Bi, X. (2025). Integrative strategies for urban flood resilience and risk: A meta-analysis of policy, infrastructural, and ecosystem-based interventions. Physics and Chemistry of the Earth, 141. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pce.2025.104077

    Urban flooding, intensified by climate change and rapid urbanization, demands robust and operationally effective resilience strategies. However, empirical evidence on the comparative effectiveness of such strategies remains limited. This study presents the first meta-analytic synthesis evaluating urban flood resilience interventions across institutional, infrastructural, and socio-ecological domains. By synthesizing data from 29 peer-reviewed studies (2000–2024), this study applies standardized effect sizes (Cohen's d) and meta-regression models to assess the effectiveness of different strategies. Results reveal a substantial overall effect (pooled d = 2.96, 95 % CI: [1.92, 3.99]) with high heterogeneity (I2 = 93.8 %). Institutional mechanisms, such as policy coordination, regulatory frameworks, and risk governance, consistently show the strongest and most statistically significant impacts (d ≈ 2.96). Low Impact Development (LID) demonstrates limited, non-significant effects (d ≈ 0.08). The study introduces a novel hierarchical resilience framework spanning different dimensions and establishes an evidence-based typology of urban flood resilience strategies. These findings highlight the importance of integrated, multi-level governance and context-specific planning in enhancing urban flood resilience. The study findings provides critical insights for implementing resilience strategies in flood-prone urban areas, and support the formulation of adaptive and sustainable urban policies. © 2025

  • Mitali, P., Patel, N., Modi, K., & Patel, S. (2026). Predictive Modeling and Strategic Planning for Urban Flood Risk Mitigation. Commun. Comput. Info. Sci., 2619 CCIS, 188–199. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-032-00350-8_14

    Urban flooding threatens Indian cities and is made worse by rapid urbanization, climate change and poor infrastructure. Severe flooding occurred in cities such as Mumbai, Chennai and Ahmedabad. This has caused huge economic losses and displacement. This study addresses the limitations of traditional flood forecasting methods. It has to contend with the complex dynamics of urban flooding. We offer a deep learning approach which uses the network Convolutional Neural Networks (CNN) and Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) networks to improve flood risk prediction. Our CNN-LSTM model combines spatial data (water table, topography) and temporal data (historical model) to classify flood risk as low or high. This method includes collecting data pre-processing (MinMaxScaler, LabelEncoder) Modeling, Training and Evaluation. The results demonstrate the accuracy of flood risk predictions and provide insights into flexible strategies for urban flood management. This research highlights the role of data-driven approaches in improving urban planning to reduce flood risk in high-risk areas. © The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2026.

  • Zhang, T., Wu, K., Wang, X., Li, X., Li, L., & Chen, L. (2025). Impact of Land Use Patterns on Flood Risk in the Chang-Zhu-Tan Urban Agglomeration, China. Remote Sensing, 17(16). https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17162889

    Flood risk assessment is an effective tool for disaster prevention and mitigation. As land use is a key factor influencing flood disasters, studying the impact of different land use patterns on flood risk is crucial. This study evaluates flood risk in the Chang-Zhu-Tan (CZT) urban agglomeration by selecting 17 socioeconomic and natural environmental factors within a risk assessment framework encompassing hazard, exposure, vulnerability, and resilience. Additionally, the Patch-Generating Land Use Simulation (PLUS) and multilayer perceptron (MLP)/Bayesian network (BN) models were coupled to predict flood risks under three future land use scenarios: natural development, urban construction, and ecological protection. This integrated modeling framework combines MLP’s high-precision nonlinear fitting with BN’s probabilistic inference, effectively mitigating prediction uncertainty in traditional single-model approaches while preserving predictive accuracy and enhancing causal interpretability. The results indicate that high-risk flood zones are predominantly concentrated along the Xiang River, while medium-high- and medium-risk areas are mainly distributed on the periphery of high-risk zones, exhibiting a gradient decline. Low-risk areas are scattered in mountainous regions far from socioeconomic activities. Simulating future land use using the PLUS model with a Kappa coefficient of 0.78 and an overall accuracy of 0.87. Under all future scenarios, cropland decreases while construction land increases. Forestland decreases in all scenarios except for ecological protection, where it expands. In future risk predictions, the MLP model achieved a high accuracy of 97.83%, while the BN model reached 87.14%. Both models consistently indicated that the flood risk was minimized under the ecological protection scenario and maximized under the urban construction scenario. Therefore, adopting ecological protection measures can effectively mitigate flood risks, offering valuable guidance for future disaster prevention and mitigation strategies. © 2025 by the authors.

  • Yan, H., Guo, K., & Guan, M. (2025). Enhanced Urban Flood Hazard Assessment by Stochastic Event Catalog. Water Resources Research, 61(8). https://doi.org/10.1029/2025WR040459

    Assessing flood severity in urban areas is a pivotal task for urban resilience and climate adaptation. However, the lack of in situ measurements hinders direct spatial estimation of flood return periods, while conventional assumptions about rainstorm-flood consistency introduce significant uncertainties due to rainstorm spatiotemporal variability (STV). This study proposes a novel framework that utilizes multivariate frequency analysis of flood variables at the street level (50 m) through a stochastic rainstorm-flood event catalog. The rainstorm events in the catalog are generated by a random field generator and resampled to match the joint distribution of STV variables consistent with radar observations. Urban flood processes are then simulated by a hydrodynamic model for flood hazard assessment (FHA). We applied the framework to a rural-urban watershed using 3,000 cases randomly resampled from the catalog. Results reveal that inundation characteristics respond more rapidly to increasing rainfall intensities than downstream flood peaks, particularly during the early stages of rainstorms. The complex joint probability structures of rainstorm severity and STV variables obscure the mechanistic control of individual factors on flood response. A significant underestimation of street-level flood hazards occurs when assuming the same return periods (RPs) as those for watershed-level hazards. The inconsistency between rainstorm and flood severities results in widespread underestimation of street-level flood hazards in upstream regions, while traditional storm designs that neglect STV lead to overestimations in mid- and downstream areas. This study highlights the complex probabilistic behavior of spatially distributed flood hazards across multiple scales, enhancing the insights and methodologies for street-level FHA. © 2025 The Author(s).

  • Liu, H., Zhang, Z., & Liu, B. (2025). Spatial–Temporal Characteristics and Drivers of Summer Extreme Precipitation in the Poyang Lake City Group (PLCG) from 1971 to 2022. Remote Sensing, 17(16). https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17162915

    Global warming has intensified the hydrological cycle, resulting in more frequent extreme precipitation events and altered spatiotemporal precipitation patterns in urban areas, thereby increasing the risk of urban flooding and threatening socio-economic and ecological security. This study investigates the characteristics of summer extreme precipitation in the Poyang Lake City Group (PLCG) from 1971 to 2022, utilizing the China Daily Precipitation Dataset and NCEP/NCAR reanalysis data. Nine extreme precipitation indices were examined through linear trend analysis, Mann–Kendall tests, wavelet transforms, and correlation methods to quantify trends, periodicity, and atmospheric drivers. The key findings include: (1) All indices exhibited increasing trends, with RX1Day and R95p exhibiting significant rises (p < 0.05). PRCPTOT, R20, and SDII also increased, indicating heightened precipitation intensity and frequency. (2) R50, RX1Day, and SDII demonstrated east-high-to-west-low spatial gradients, whereas PRCPTOT and R20 peaked in the eastern and western PLCG. More than over 88% of stations recorded rising trends in PRCPTOT and R95p. (3) Abrupt changes occurred during 1993–2009 for PRCPTOT, R50, and SDII. Wavelet analysis revealed dominant periodicities of 26–39 years, linked to atmospheric oscillations. (4) Strong subtropical highs, moisture convergence, and negative OLR anomalies were closely associated with extreme precipitation. Warmer SSTs in the eastern equatorial Pacific amplified precipitation in preceding seasons. This study provides a scientific basis for flood prevention and climate adaptation in the PLCG and highlighting the region’s vulnerability to monsoonal shifts under global warming. © 2025 by the authors.

  • Mourot, F. M., Irvine, D. J., Remenyi, T. A., Hutley, L. B., Crosbie, R. S., & Moore, C. R. (2025). Producing Hydrological Projections Under Climate Change: A Groundwater-Inclusive Practical Guide. Earth’s Future, 13(8). https://doi.org/10.1029/2025EF006316

    With global warming, the hydrological cycle is intensifying with more frequent and severe droughts and floods, placing water resources and their dependent communities under increasing stress. Guidance and insights into the projection of future water conditions are, therefore, increasingly needed to inform climate change adaptation. Hydrological projections can provide such insights when suitably designed for user needs, produced from the best available climate knowledge, and leverage appropriate hydrological models. However, producing such hydrological projections is a complex process that requires skills and knowledge spanning from the often-siloed disciplines of climate, hydrology, communication, and decision-making. Groundwater projections are still underrepresented compared to surface water projections, despite the importance of groundwater to sustain society and the environment. Accordingly, this paper bridges these silos and fills a gap by providing detailed guidance on the important steps and best practices to develop groundwater-inclusive hydrological projections that can effectively support decision-making. Using an extensive literature review and our practical experience as climate scientists, hydro(geo)logists, numerical modelers, uncertainty experts and decision-makers, here we provide: (a) an overview of climate change hydrological impacts as background knowledge; (b) a step-by-step guide to produce groundwater-inclusive hydrological projections under climate change, targeted to both scientists and water practitioners; (c) a summary of important considerations related to hydrological projection uncertainty; and (d) insights to use hydrological projections and their associated uncertainty for impactful communication and decision-making. By providing this practical guide, our paper addresses a critical interdisciplinary knowledge gap and supports enhanced decision-making and resilience to climate change threats. © 2025 Commonwealth of Australia. Earth Science New Zealand. Acclimatised Pty Ltd and The Author(s). Earth's Future published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Geophysical Union.

  • Ogunbunmi, S., Chen, Y., Zhao, Q., Nagothu, D., Wei, S., Chen, G., & Blasch, E. (2025). Interest Flooding Attacks in Named Data Networking and Mitigations: Recent Advances and Challenges. Future Internet, 17(8). https://doi.org/10.3390/fi17080357

    Named Data Networking (NDN) represents a promising Information-Centric Networking architecture that addresses limitations of traditional host-centric Internet protocols by emphasizing content names rather than host addresses for communication. While NDN offers advantages in content distribution, mobility support, and built-in security features, its stateful forwarding plane introduces significant vulnerabilities, particularly Interest Flooding Attacks (IFAs). These IFA attacks exploit the Pending Interest Table (PIT) by injecting malicious interest packets for non-existent or unsatisfiable content, leading to resource exhaustion and denial-of-service attacks against legitimate users. This survey examines research advances in IFA detection and mitigation from 2013 to 2024, analyzing seven relevant published detection and mitigation strategies to provide current insights into this evolving security challenge. We establish a taxonomy of attack variants, including Fake Interest, Unsatisfiable Interest, Interest Loop, and Collusive models, while examining their operational characteristics and network performance impacts. Our analysis categorizes defense mechanisms into five primary approaches: rate-limiting strategies, PIT management techniques, machine learning and artificial intelligence methods, reputation-based systems, and blockchain-enabled solutions. These approaches are evaluated for their effectiveness, computational requirements, and deployment feasibility. The survey extends to domain-specific implementations in resource-constrained environments, examining adaptations for Internet of Things deployments, wireless sensor networks, and high-mobility vehicular scenarios. Five critical research directions are proposed: adaptive defense mechanisms against sophisticated attackers, privacy-preserving detection techniques, real-time optimization for edge computing environments, standardized evaluation frameworks, and hybrid approaches combining multiple mitigation strategies. © 2025 by the authors.

  • Sarma, H. K., Awolayo, A. N., Olayiwola, S. O., Fakir, S. H., & Belhaj, A. F. (2025). Injectivity, Potential Wettability Alteration, and Mineral Dissolution in Low-Salinity Waterflood Applications: The Role of Salinity, Surfactants, Polymers, Nanomaterials, and Mineral Dissolution. Processes, 13(8). https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13082636

    Waterflooding, a key method for secondary hydrocarbon recovery, has been employed since the early 20th century. Over time, the role of water chemistry and ions in recovery has been studied extensively. Low-salinity water (LSW) injection, a common technique since the 1930s, improves oil recovery by altering the wettability of reservoir rocks and reducing residual oil saturation. Recent developments emphasize the integration of LSW with various recovery methods such as CO2 injections, surfactants, alkali, polymers, and nanoparticles (NPs). This article offers a comprehensive perspective on how LSW injection is combined with these enhanced oil recovery (EOR) techniques, with a focus on improving oil displacement and recovery efficiency. Surfactants enhance the effectiveness of LSW by lowering interfacial tension (IFT) and improving wettability, while ASP flooding helps reduce surfactant loss and promotes in situ soap formation. Polymer injections boost oil recovery by increasing fluid viscosity and improving sweep efficiency. Nevertheless, challenges such as fine migration and unstable flow persist, requiring additional optimization. The combination of LSW with nanoparticles has shown potential in modifying wettability, adjusting viscosity, and stabilizing emulsions through careful concentration management to prevent or reduce formation damage. Finally, building on discussions around the underlying mechanisms involved in improved oil recovery and the challenges associated with each approach, this article highlights their prospects for future research and field implementation. By combining LSW with advanced EOR techniques, the oil industry can improve recovery efficiency while addressing both environmental and operational challenges. © 2025 by the authors.

  • Latif, S., El Ouadi, I., & Ouarda, T. B. M. J. (2025). Copula-based joint distribution modelling of precipitation, temperature and humidity events in the assessments of agricultural risks, with a case study in Morocco. Stochastic Environmental Research and Risk Assessment, 39(9), 4017–4061. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00477-025-03047-4

    The agriculture sector is profoundly impacted by the abiotic stresses in arid or semi-arid regions that experience extreme weather patterns related to temperature (T), precipitation (P), humidity (H), and other factors. This study adopts a flexible approach that incorporates the D-vine copula density to analyze trivariate (and bivariate) joint and conditional hazard risk. The methodology was applied to a case study in the Ait Ben Yacoub region of Morocco. Monthly series for T, H, and P were modeled using the Weibull-2P and Weibull-3P models, selected based on fitness statistics. The survival BB8 copula was best described as joint dependence for pair T–P, rotated BB8 270 degrees copula for T–H, while rotated Joe 270 degrees copula for P–H. The analysis of joint probability stress focused on both primary joint scenarios (for OR and AND-hazard conditions) and conditional return periods (RPs) for trivariate and bivariate case. Lower univariate RPs resulted in higher marginal quantiles for T and lower for H and P events. Lower trivariate (and bivariate) AND-joint RPs (or higher concurrence probabilities) were associated with higher T with lower P and H quantiles. The occurrence of trivariate (and bivariate) events was less frequent in the AND-joint case compared to the OR-joint case. The conditional joint RP of T (or T with P, or T with H) was significantly affected by different P (at 10th and 25th percentile) and H (at 5th and 25th percentile) (or P, or H) conditions. Lower conditional RPs of T (or T with H, or T with P) had resulted at given low P and H (or low P, or low H levels). In conclusion, the estimated risk statistics are vital for the study region, highlighting the need for effective adaptation and resilience planning in agriculture crop management.

    Consulter sur doi.org
  • Kabore, P., Rivers, N., & Armstrong, C. D. (2025). Natural disasters and individual economic performance: a case study from the slave lake wildfire. Climate Change Economics, 16(03), 2550012. https://doi.org/10.1142/S2010007825500125

    In May 2011, the municipality of Slave Lake, Alberta, was hit by a devastating wildfire; the second costliest natural disaster in Canada at the time. Residents of Slave Lake were forced to evacuate for at least a month. This case study uses longitudinal income tax data from 2004 to 2018 to estimate the short, medium, and long-term individual economic effects of this wildfire. Estimates suggest an average drop in total income of 10.5% relative to a counter-factual scenario with no wildfire over the 7 years following the wildfire, mainly driven by a decrease in employment income. The percentage of total income lost is similar for males and females. The largest effects are found for workers in the agriculture and forestry sectors. Back-of-the- envelope calculations suggest an aggregate loss in employment income of $150 million in the 7 years following the disaster, equivalent to over 13% of direct economic losses due to property damage, firefighting, and contemporaneous business closure.

    Consulter sur www.worldscientific.com
  • Awad, M. M., & Homayouni, S. (2025). High-Resolution Daily XCH4 Prediction Using New Convolutional Neural Network Autoencoder Model and Remote Sensing Data. Atmosphere, 16(7), 806. https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos16070806

    Atmospheric methane (CH4) concentrations have increased to 2.5 times their pre-industrial levels, with a marked acceleration in recent decades. CH4 is responsible for approximately 30% of the global temperature rise since the Industrial Revolution. This growing concentration contributes to environmental degradation, including ocean acidification, accelerated climate change, and a rise in natural disasters. The column-averaged dry-air mole fraction of methane (XCH4) is a crucial indicator for assessing atmospheric CH4 levels. In this study, the Sentinel-5P TROPOMI instrument was employed to monitor, map, and estimate CH4 concentrations on both regional and global scales. However, TROPOMI data exhibits limitations such as spatial gaps and relatively coarse resolution, particularly at regional scales or over small areas. To mitigate these limitations, a novel Convolutional Neural Network Autoencoder (CNN-AE) model was developed. Validation was performed using the Total Carbon Column Observing Network (TCCON), providing a benchmark for evaluating the accuracy of various interpolation and prediction models. The CNN-AE model demonstrated the highest accuracy in regional-scale analysis, achieving a Mean Absolute Error (MAE) of 28.48 ppb and a Root Mean Square Error (RMSE) of 30.07 ppb. This was followed by the Random Forest (RF) regressor (MAE: 29.07 ppb; RMSE: 36.89 ppb), GridData Nearest Neighbor Interpolator (NNI) (MAE: 30.06 ppb; RMSE: 32.14 ppb), and the Radial Basis Function (RBF) Interpolator (MAE: 80.23 ppb; RMSE: 90.54 ppb). On a global scale, the CNN-AE again outperformed other methods, yielding the lowest MAE and RMSE (19.78 and 24.7 ppb, respectively), followed by RF (21.46 and 27.23 ppb), GridData NNI (25.3 and 32.62 ppb), and RBF (43.08 and 54.93 ppb).

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  • Razavi-Termeh, S. V., Sadeghi-Niaraki, A., Ali, F., Pradhan, B., & Choi, S.-M. (2025). Optimizing ensemble learning for satellite-based multi-hazard monitoring and susceptibility assessment of landslides, land subsidence, floods, and wildfires. Scientific Reports, 15(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-15381-2

    The preparation of accurate multi-hazard susceptibility maps is essential to effective disaster risk management. Past studies have relied mainly on traditional machine learning models, but these models do not perform well for complex spatial patterns. To address this gap, this study uses two meta-heuristic algorithms (Genetic Algorithm (GA) and Particle Swarm Optimization (PSO)) to provide an optimized Random Forest (RF) model with better predictive ability. We focus on four significant hazards—landslides, land subsidence, wildfires, and floods—in Kurdistan Province, Iran, using Sentinel-1 and Sentinel-2 satellite imagery collected between 2015 and 2022. Furthermore, two models of RF-GA and RF-PSO were utilized to create multi-hazard susceptibility, which were evaluated using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves and area under the curve (AUC). The RF-GA algorithm achieved 91.1% accuracy for flood hazards, 83.8% for wildfires, and 99.1% for landslide hazards. In contrast, utilizing RF-PSO resulted in a 95.9% accuracy for land subsidence hazards. The combined RF-GA algorithm demonstrated superior accuracy to individual RF modeling techniques. Furthermore, eastern regions are more prone to floods and land subsidence, whereas western areas face more significant risks from landslides and wildfires. Additionally, floods and land subsidence exhibit a considerable correlation, impacting each other’s occurrence, while wildfires and landslides demonstrate interacting dynamics, influencing each other’s likelihood of occurrence. © The Author(s) 2025.

  • Alexopoulos, M. J., Iliopoulou, T., Modé, P., Istrati, D., Spyrakos, C. C., Soile, S., Verykokou, S., Ioannidis, C., & Koutsoyiannis, D. (2025). A novel and scalable flood risk assessment framework for cultural heritage based on unmanned aerial vehicle photogrammetry and multi-scale rain-on-grid hydraulic modeling. Science of the Total Environment, 998. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2025.180256

    This study presents a novel multi-scale flood risk assessment framework for cultural heritage sites, applied to the Temple of Apollo, Aegina Island, Greece. Three modeling configurations were developed and compared: (i) an island-wide Rain-on-Grid (RoG) hydraulic model at 5 m resolution, (ii) a site-only model driven by inflows from the island-scale simulation, and (iii) a high-resolution nested model coupling island-scale outputs with centimeter-scale site RoG simulations enabled by UAV photogrammetry. Simulations for 100-, 1000-, and 2000-year return periods revealed strong scale-dependent differences: island-wide inundation extents of 7.3–10.3 km2, site-specific inundation of 2–24 %, and water volumes of 92–1483 m3 depending on the model configuration and return period. Flow velocities remained below 1.0 m/s, indicating low erosive potential but possible material degradation. Limestone deterioration analysis showed 4–10 % compressive strength reduction, 3–9 % elastic modulus decrease, and mass losses of 0.64–26.08 kg after 24-h inundations. The nested approach provided more realistic water volume accumulation over the single-scale model and revealed critical micro-topographic controls on flood behavior. This scalable, built on readily accessible tools (HEC-RAS and UAV), framework supports rapid deployment to heritage sites globally, enabling quantitative risk assessments for adaptation planning and conservation prioritization. © 2025 The Authors

  • Schulte, L., Santisteban, J. I., Fuller, I. C., & Ballesteros-Cánovas, J. A. (2025). Editorial preface to special issue: Temporal and spatial patterns in Holocene floods under the influence of past global change, and their implications for forecasting “unpredecented” future events. Global and Planetary Change, 254. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2025.105021

    Floods constitute the most significant natural hazard to societies worldwide. Population growth and unchecked development have led to floodplain encroachment. Modelling suggests that climate change will regionally intensify the threat posed by future floods, with more people in harm's way. From a global change perspective, past flood events and their spatial-temporal patterns are of particular interest because they can be linked to former climate patterns, which can be used to guide future climate predictions. Millennial and centennial time series contain evidence of very rare extreme events, which are often considered by society as ‘unprecedented’. By understanding their timing, magnitude and frequency in conjunction with prevailing climate regime, we can better forecast their future occurrence. This Virtual Special Issue (VSI) entitled Temporal and spatial patterns in Holocene floods under the influence of past global change, and their implications for forecasting “unpredecented” future events comprises 14 papers that focus on how centennial and millennia-scale natural and documentary flood archives help improve future flood science. Specifically, documentation of large and very rare flood episodes challenges society's lack of imagination regarding the scale of flood disasters that are possible (what we term here, the “unknown unknowns”). Temporal and spatial flood behaviour and related climate patterns as well as the reconstruction of flood propagation in river systems are important foci of this VSI. These reconstructions are crucial for the provision of robust and reliable data sets, knowledge and baseline information for future flood scenarios and forecasting. We argue that it remains difficult to establish analogies for understanding flood risk during the current period of global warming. Most studies in this VSI suggest that the most severe flooding occurred during relatively cool climate periods, such as the Little Ice Age. However, flood patterns have been significantly altered by land use and river management in many catchments and floodplains over the last two centuries, thereby obscuring the climate signal. When the largest floods in instrumental records are compared with paleoflood records reconstructed from natural and documentary archives, it becomes clear that precedent floods should have been considered in many cases of flood frequency analysis and flood risk modelling in hydraulic infrastructure. Finally, numerical geomorphological analysis and hydrological simulations show great potential for testing and improving our understanding of the processes and factors involved in the temporal and spatial behaviour of floods. © 2025 The Authors

  • Guo, Z., Shi, X., Zhang, D., & Zhao, Q. (2026). Effects of long-term wetland variations on flood risk assessments in the Yangtze River Basin. Environmental Impact Assessment Review, 116. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eiar.2025.108123

    Flooding is the most frequent natural disaster in the Yangtze River Basin (YRB), causing significant socio-economic damages. In recent decades, abundant wetland resources in the YRB have experienced substantial changes and played a significant role in strengthening the hydrological resilience to flood risks. However, wetland-related approaches remain underdeveloped for mitigating flood risks in the YRB due to the lack of considering long-term wetland effects in the flood risk assessment. Therefore, this study develops an wetland-related GIS-based spatial multi-index flood risk assessment model by incorporating the effects of wetland variations, to investigate the long-term implications of wetland variations on flood risks, to identify dominant flood risk indicators under wetland effects, and to provide wetland-related flood risk management suggestions. These findings indicate that wetlands in the Taihu Lake Basin, Wanjiang Plain, Poyang Lake Basin, and Dongting and Honghu Lake Basin could enhance flood control capacity and reduce flood risks in most years between 1985 and 2021 except years with extreme flood disasters. Wetlands in the Sichuan Basin have aggravated but limited impacts on flood risks. Precipitation in the Taihu Lake Basin and Poyang Lake Basin, runoff and vegetation cover in the Wanjiang Plain, GDP in the Taihu Lake Basin, population density in the Taihu lake Basin, Dongting and Honghu Lake Basin, and the Sichuan Basin are dominant flood risk indicators under wetland effects. Reasonably managing wetlands, maximizing stormwater storage capacity, increasing vegetation coverage in urbanized and precipitated regions are feasible suggestions for developing wetland-related flood resilience strategies in the YRB. © 2025 The Authors

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