{"type": "FeatureCollection", "features": [{"id": "10.1038/s42949-024-00154-z", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-25T16:17:43Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2024-03-16", "title": "Urban greenspaces and nearby natural areas support similar levels of soil ecosystem services", "description": "Abstract<p>Greenspaces are important for sustaining healthy urban environments and their human populations. Yet their capacity to support multiple ecosystem services simultaneously (multiservices) compared with nearby natural ecosystems remains virtually unknown. We conducted a global field survey in 56 urban areas to investigate the influence of urban greenspaces on 23 soil and plant attributes and compared them with nearby natural environments. We show that, in general, urban greenspaces and nearby natural areas support similar levels of soil multiservices, with only six of 23 attributes (available phosphorus, water holding capacity, water respiration, plant cover, arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF), and arachnid richness) significantly greater in greenspaces, and one (available ammonium) greater in natural areas. Further analyses showed that, although natural areas and urban greenspaces delivered a similar number of services at low (&gt;25% threshold) and moderate (&gt;50%) levels of functioning, natural systems supported significantly more functions at high (&gt;75%) levels of functioning. Management practices (mowing) played an important role in explaining urban ecosystem services, but there were no effects of fertilisation or irrigation. Some services declined with increasing site size, for both greenspaces and natural areas. Our work highlights the fact that urban greenspaces are more similar to natural environments than previously reported and underscores the importance of managing urban greenspaces not only for their social and recreational values, but for supporting multiple ecosystem services on which soils and human well-being depends.</p", "keywords": ["Medio ambiente natural", "2410.05 Ecolog\u00eda Humana", "Health", " Toxicology and Mutagenesis", "0211 other engineering and technologies", "710", "Urban Green Space", "02 engineering and technology", "01 natural sciences", "zelene povr\u0161ine", "ekosistemske storitve", " zelene povr\u0161ine", " urbani gozdovi", " tla", "Urban planning", "Natural (archaeology)", "11. Sustainability", "Urban Heat Islands and Mitigation Strategies", "info:eu-repo/classification/udc/630*1:630*9", "2. 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The chemical and morphological properties of mineral dust aerosols emitted by wind erosion from arid and semi-arid regions influence climate, ocean and land ecosystems, air quality, and multiple socio-economic sectors. However, there is an incomplete understanding of the emitted dust particle size distribution (PSD) in terms of its constituent minerals that typically result from the fragmentation of soil aggregates during wind erosion. The emitted dust PSD affects the duration of particle transport and thus each mineral\u2019s global distribution, along with its specific effect upon climate. This lack of understanding is largely due to the scarcity of relevant in situ measurements in dust sources. To advance our understanding of the physicochemical properties of the emitted dust PSD, we present insights into the elemental composition and morphology of individual dust particles collected during the FRontiers in dust minerAloGical coMposition and its Effects upoN climaTe (FRAGMENT) field campaign in the Moroccan Sahara in September 2019. We analyzed more than 300,000 freshly emitted individual particles by performing offline analysis in the laboratory using Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) coupled with Energy-Dispersive X-ray Spectrometry (EDX). Eight major particle-type classes were identified where clay minerals make up the majority of the analyzed particles by number, with carbonates and quartz contributing to a lesser extent. We provide an exhaustive analysis of the size distribution and potential mixing state of different particle types, focusing largely on iron-rich (Fe-oxi/hydroxides) and feldspar particles, which are key to the effects of dust upon radiation and clouds. Nearly pure or externally mixed Fe-oxi/hydroxides are present only in diameters smaller than 2 \u00b5m and mainly below 1 \u00b5m. Fe-oxi/hydroxides tend to be increasingly internally mixed with other minerals, especially clays, as particle size increases, i.e., the volume fraction of Fe-oxi/hydroxides in aggregates decreases with particle size. Pure (externally-mixed) feldspar grains represented 3.7 % of all the particles, of which we estimated about a quarter to be K-feldspar. The externally-mixed total feldspar and K-feldspar abundances are relatively invariant with particle size, in contrast to the increasing abundance of feldspar-like (internally-mixed) aggregates with particle size. We also found that overall the median aspect ratio is rather constant across particle size and mineral groups, although we obtain slightly higher aspect ratios for internally-mixed particles. The detailed information on the composition of freshly emitted individual dust particles along with the quantitative analysis of their mixing state presented here can be used to constrain climate models including mineral species in their representation of the dust cycle.                         </p></article>", "keywords": ["Atmospheric chemistry", "550", "QC1-999", "http://metadata.un.org/sdg/3", "Mineral dust", "01 natural sciences", "Climate models", "\u00c0rees tem\u00e0tiques de la UPC::Enginyeria agroaliment\u00e0ria::Ci\u00e8ncies de la terra i de la vida::Climatologia i meteorologia", "Aerosols Measurement", "Pols minerals", "QD1-999", "Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages", "0105 earth and related environmental sciences", "mineral dust", "info:eu-repo/classification/ddc/550", "electron microscopy", "ddc:550", "Physics", "15. Life on land", "info:eu-repo/classification/udc/502.3/.7", "Pollution", "Moroccan Sahara", "Earth sciences", "Chemistry", "13. Climate action", "Mineral dust particles", "Air quality", "Desert dust"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://acp.copernicus.org/articles/23/3861/2023/acp-23-3861-2023.pdf"}, {"href": "https://acp.copernicus.org/articles/23/3861/2023/acp-23-3861-2023-supplement.pdf"}, {"href": "https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-2022-742"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Atmospheric%20Chemistry%20and%20Physics", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "10.5194/acp-2022-742", "name": "item", "description": "10.5194/acp-2022-742", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/10.5194/acp-2022-742"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2022-11-07T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "10.5194/acp-23-15815-2023", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-25T16:21:35Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2023-12-22", "title": "Variability in sediment particle size, mineralogy, and Fe mode of occurrence across dust-source inland drainage basins: the case of the lower Dr\u00e2a Valley, Morocco", "description": "<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?><article><p>Abstract. The effects of desert dust upon climate and ecosystems depend strongly on its particle size and size-resolved mineralogical composition. However, there is very limited quantitative knowledge on the particle size and composition of the parent sediments along with their variability within dust-source regions, particularly in dust emission hotspots. The lower Dr\u00e2a Valley, an inland drainage basin and dust hotspot region located in the Moroccan Sahara, was chosen for a comprehensive analysis of sediment particle size and mineralogy. Different sediment type samples (n=\u200942) were collected, including paleo-sediments, paved surfaces, crusts, and dunes, and analysed for particle-size distribution (minimally and fully dispersed samples) and mineralogy. Furthermore, Fe sequential wet extraction was carried out to characterise the modes of occurrence of Fe, including Fe in Fe (oxyhydr)oxides, mainly from goethite and hematite, which are key to dust radiative effects; the poorly crystalline pool of Fe (readily exchangeable ionic Fe and Fe in nano-Fe oxides), relevant to dust impacts upon ocean biogeochemistry; and structural Fe. Results yield a conceptual model where both particle size and mineralogy are segregated by transport and deposition of sediments during runoff of water across the basin and by the precipitation of salts, which causes a sedimentary fractionation. The proportion of coarser particles enriched in quartz is higher in the highlands, while that of finer particles rich in clay, carbonates, and Fe oxides is higher in the lowland dust emission hotspots. There, when water ponds and evaporates, secondary carbonates and salts precipitate, and the clays are enriched in readily exchangeable ionic Fe, due to sorption of dissolved Fe by illite. The results differ from currently available mineralogical atlases and highlight the need for observationally constrained global high-resolution mineralogical data for mineral-speciated dust modelling. The dataset obtained represents an important resource for future evaluation of surface mineralogy retrievals from spaceborne spectroscopy.                     </p></article>", "keywords": ["Mineral dusts", "geology", "550", "QC1-999", "Climate", "01 natural sciences", "\u00c0rees tem\u00e0tiques de la UPC::Desenvolupament hum\u00e0 i sostenible::Enginyeria ambiental", "Pols minerals", "QD1-999", "Sahara", "0105 earth and related environmental sciences", "mineral dust", "S\u00e0hara", "info:eu-repo/classification/ddc/550", "ddc:550", "Physics", "Aire--Contaminaci\u00f3", "15. Life on land", "info:eu-repo/classification/udc/502.3/.7", "6. Clean water", "Earth sciences", "Chemistry", "13. Climate action", "Air--Pollution", "Desert dust", "aerosols"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://acp.copernicus.org/articles/23/15815/2023/acp-23-15815-2023.pdf"}, {"href": "https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-23-15815-2023"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Atmospheric%20Chemistry%20and%20Physics", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "10.5194/acp-23-15815-2023", "name": "item", "description": "10.5194/acp-23-15815-2023", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/10.5194/acp-23-15815-2023"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2023-12-22T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "1959.7/uws:76472", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-25T16:25:07Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2024-03-16", "title": "Urban greenspaces and nearby natural areas support similar levels of soil ecosystem services", "description": "Abstract<p>Greenspaces are important for sustaining healthy urban environments and their human populations. Yet their capacity to support multiple ecosystem services simultaneously (multiservices) compared with nearby natural ecosystems remains virtually unknown. We conducted a global field survey in 56 urban areas to investigate the influence of urban greenspaces on 23 soil and plant attributes and compared them with nearby natural environments. We show that, in general, urban greenspaces and nearby natural areas support similar levels of soil multiservices, with only six of 23 attributes (available phosphorus, water holding capacity, water respiration, plant cover, arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF), and arachnid richness) significantly greater in greenspaces, and one (available ammonium) greater in natural areas. Further analyses showed that, although natural areas and urban greenspaces delivered a similar number of services at low (&gt;25% threshold) and moderate (&gt;50%) levels of functioning, natural systems supported significantly more functions at high (&gt;75%) levels of functioning. Management practices (mowing) played an important role in explaining urban ecosystem services, but there were no effects of fertilisation or irrigation. Some services declined with increasing site size, for both greenspaces and natural areas. Our work highlights the fact that urban greenspaces are more similar to natural environments than previously reported and underscores the importance of managing urban greenspaces not only for their social and recreational values, but for supporting multiple ecosystem services on which soils and human well-being depends.</p", "keywords": ["Medio ambiente natural", "2410.05 Ecolog\u00eda Humana", "Health", " Toxicology and Mutagenesis", "0211 other engineering and technologies", "710", "Urban Green Space", "02 engineering and technology", "01 natural sciences", "zelene povr\u0161ine", "Urban planning", "Natural (archaeology)", "11. Sustainability", "Urban Heat Islands and Mitigation Strategies", "info:eu-repo/classification/udc/630*1:630*9", "2. Zero hunger", "Global and Planetary Change", "Global Analysis of Ecosystem Services and Land Use", "Geography", "Ecology", "2417.13 Ecolog\u00eda Vegetal", "Carbon cycle", "3. Good health", "2511 Ciencias del Suelo (Edafolog\u00eda)", "Archaeology", "Physical Sciences", "urban forests", "HT361-384", "Ecolog\u00eda (Biolog\u00eda)", "Urbanization. City and country", "Environmental Engineering", "711.4:911.375", "631.4", "Environmental science", "soil", "12. Responsible consumption", "Impact of Urban Green Space on Public Health", "Urban ecosystem", "XXXXXX - Unknown", "Ecosystem services", "14. Life underwater", "Agroforestry", "Biology", "City planning", "Ecosystem", "0105 earth and related environmental sciences", "SDG-15: Life on land", "tla", "FOS: Environmental engineering", "15. Life on land", "ekosistemske storitve", "Urban ecology", "HT165.5-169.9", "13. 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The effects of desert dust upon climate and ecosystems depend strongly on its particle size and size-resolved mineralogical composition. However, there is very limited quantitative knowledge on the particle size and composition of the parent sediments along with their variability within dust-source regions, particularly in dust emission hotspots. The lower Dr\u00e2a Valley, an inland drainage basin and dust hotspot region located in the Moroccan Sahara, was chosen for a comprehensive analysis of sediment particle size and mineralogy. Different sediment type samples (n=\u200942) were collected, including paleo-sediments, paved surfaces, crusts, and dunes, and analysed for particle-size distribution (minimally and fully dispersed samples) and mineralogy. Furthermore, Fe sequential wet extraction was carried out to characterise the modes of occurrence of Fe, including Fe in Fe (oxyhydr)oxides, mainly from goethite and hematite, which are key to dust radiative effects; the poorly crystalline pool of Fe (readily exchangeable ionic Fe and Fe in nano-Fe oxides), relevant to dust impacts upon ocean biogeochemistry; and structural Fe. Results yield a conceptual model where both particle size and mineralogy are segregated by transport and deposition of sediments during runoff of water across the basin and by the precipitation of salts, which causes a sedimentary fractionation. The proportion of coarser particles enriched in quartz is higher in the highlands, while that of finer particles rich in clay, carbonates, and Fe oxides is higher in the lowland dust emission hotspots. There, when water ponds and evaporates, secondary carbonates and salts precipitate, and the clays are enriched in readily exchangeable ionic Fe, due to sorption of dissolved Fe by illite. The results differ from currently available mineralogical atlases and highlight the need for observationally constrained global high-resolution mineralogical data for mineral-speciated dust modelling. The dataset obtained represents an important resource for future evaluation of surface mineralogy retrievals from spaceborne spectroscopy.</p></article>", "keywords": ["Mineral dusts", "geology", "550", "QC1-999", "Climate", "01 natural sciences", "\u00c0rees tem\u00e0tiques de la UPC::Desenvolupament hum\u00e0 i sostenible::Enginyeria ambiental", "Pols minerals", "QD1-999", "Sahara", "0105 earth and related environmental sciences", "mineral dust", "S\u00e0hara", "info:eu-repo/classification/ddc/550", "ddc:550", "Physics", "Aire--Contaminaci\u00f3", "15. Life on land", "info:eu-repo/classification/udc/502.3/.7", "6. Clean water", "Earth sciences", "Chemistry", "13. Climate action", "Air--Pollution", "Desert dust", "aerosols"]}, "links": [{"href": "https://acp.copernicus.org/articles/23/15815/2023/acp-23-15815-2023.pdf"}, {"href": "https://doi.org/20.500.12556/RUNG-8752"}, {"rel": "related", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/Atmospheric%20Chemistry%20and%20Physics", "name": "related record", "description": "related record", "type": "application/json"}, {"rel": "self", "type": "application/geo+json", "title": "20.500.12556/RUNG-8752", "name": "item", "description": "20.500.12556/RUNG-8752", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main/items/20.500.12556/RUNG-8752"}, {"rel": "collection", "type": "application/json", "title": "Collection", "name": "collection", "description": "Collection", "href": "https://repository.soilwise-he.eu/cat/collections/metadata:main"}], "time": {"date": "2023-12-22T00:00:00Z"}}, {"id": "20.500.12556/RUNG-9073", "type": "Feature", "geometry": null, "properties": {"updated": "2026-05-25T16:25:17Z", "type": "Journal Article", "created": "2022-11-07", "title": "Insights into the single particle composition, size, mixing state and aspect ratio of freshly emitted mineral dust from field measurements in the Moroccan Sahara using electron microscopy", "description": "<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?><article><p>Abstract. The chemical and morphological properties of mineral dust aerosols emitted by wind erosion from arid and semi-arid regions influence climate, ocean and land ecosystems, air quality, and multiple socio-economic sectors. However, there is an incomplete understanding of the emitted dust particle size distribution (PSD) in terms of its constituent minerals that typically result from the fragmentation of soil aggregates during wind erosion. The emitted dust PSD affects the duration of particle transport and thus each mineral\u2019s global distribution, along with its specific effect upon climate. This lack of understanding is largely due to the scarcity of relevant in situ measurements in dust sources. To advance our understanding of the physicochemical properties of the emitted dust PSD, we present insights into the elemental composition and morphology of individual dust particles collected during the FRontiers in dust minerAloGical coMposition and its Effects upoN climaTe (FRAGMENT) field campaign in the Moroccan Sahara in September 2019. We analyzed more than 300,000 freshly emitted individual particles by performing offline analysis in the laboratory using Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) coupled with Energy-Dispersive X-ray Spectrometry (EDX). Eight major particle-type classes were identified where clay minerals make up the majority of the analyzed particles by number, with carbonates and quartz contributing to a lesser extent. We provide an exhaustive analysis of the size distribution and potential mixing state of different particle types, focusing largely on iron-rich (Fe-oxi/hydroxides) and feldspar particles, which are key to the effects of dust upon radiation and clouds. Nearly pure or externally mixed Fe-oxi/hydroxides are present only in diameters smaller than 2 \u00b5m and mainly below 1 \u00b5m. Fe-oxi/hydroxides tend to be increasingly internally mixed with other minerals, especially clays, as particle size increases, i.e., the volume fraction of Fe-oxi/hydroxides in aggregates decreases with particle size. Pure (externally-mixed) feldspar grains represented 3.7 % of all the particles, of which we estimated about a quarter to be K-feldspar. The externally-mixed total feldspar and K-feldspar abundances are relatively invariant with particle size, in contrast to the increasing abundance of feldspar-like (internally-mixed) aggregates with particle size. We also found that overall the median aspect ratio is rather constant across particle size and mineral groups, although we obtain slightly higher aspect ratios for internally-mixed particles. The detailed information on the composition of freshly emitted individual dust particles along with the quantitative analysis of their mixing state presented here can be used to constrain climate models including mineral species in their representation of the dust cycle.</p></article>", "keywords": ["Atmospheric chemistry", "550", "QC1-999", "http://metadata.un.org/sdg/3", "Mineral dust", "01 natural sciences", "Climate models", "\u00c0rees tem\u00e0tiques de la UPC::Enginyeria agroaliment\u00e0ria::Ci\u00e8ncies de la terra i de la vida::Climatologia i meteorologia", "Aerosols Measurement", "Pols minerals", "QD1-999", "Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages", "0105 earth and related environmental sciences", "mineral dust", "info:eu-repo/classification/ddc/550", "electron microscopy", "ddc:550", "Physics", "15. Life on land", "info:eu-repo/classification/udc/502.3/.7", "Pollution", "Moroccan Sahara", "Earth sciences", "Chemistry", "13. 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