@article{MTMT:35086540, title = {Texture and clay mineralogy as main drivers of the priming effect in temperate forest soils}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/35086540}, author = {Zacháry, Dóra and Filep, Tibor and Jakab, Gergely Imre and Ringer, Marianna and Balázs, Réka and Németh, Tibor and Szalai, Zoltán}, doi = {10.1007/s11104-024-06819-z}, journal-iso = {PLANT SOIL}, journal = {PLANT AND SOIL}, volume = {508}, unique-id = {35086540}, issn = {0032-079X}, year = {2025}, eissn = {1573-5036}, pages = {547-565}, orcid-numbers = {Zacháry, Dóra/0000-0001-8248-5571; Jakab, Gergely Imre/0000-0001-5424-1983; Németh, Tibor/0000-0002-1836-6006; Szalai, Zoltán/0000-0001-5267-411X} } @article{MTMT:35319036, title = {Cross‐validation matters in species distribution models: a case study with goatfish species}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/35319036}, author = {Huang, Hongwei and Zhang, Zhixin and Bede-Fazekas, Ákos and Mammola, Stefano and Gu, Jiqi and Zhou, Jinxin and Qu, Junmei and Lin, Qiang}, doi = {10.1111/ecog.07354}, journal-iso = {ECOGRAPHY}, journal = {ECOGRAPHY}, volume = {2025}, unique-id = {35319036}, issn = {0906-7590}, abstract = {In an era of ongoing biodiversity, it is critical to map biodiversity patterns in space and time for better‐informing conservation and management. Species distribution models (SDMs) are widely applied in various types of such biodiversity assessments. Cross‐validation represents a prevalent approach to assess the discrimination capacity of a target SDM algorithm and determine its optimal parameters. Several alternative cross‐validation methods exist; however, the influence of choosing a specific cross‐validation method on SDM performance and predictions remains unresolved. Here, we tested the performance of random versus spatial cross‐validation methods for SDM using goatfishes (Actinopteri: Syngnathiformes: Mullidae) as a case study, which are recognized as indicator species for coastal waters. Our results showed that the random versus spatial cross‐validation methods resulted in different optimal model parameterizations in 57 out of 60 modeled species. Significant difference existed in predictive performance between the random and spatial cross‐validation methods, and the two cross‐validation methods yielded different projected present‐day spatial distribution and future projection patterns of goatfishes under climate change exposure. Despite the disparity in species distributions, both approaches consistently suggested the Indo‐Australian Archipelago as the hotspot of goatfish species richness and also as the most vulnerable area to climate change. Our findings highlight that the choice of cross‐validation method is an overlooked source of uncertainty in SDM studies. Meanwhile, the consistency in richness predictions highlights the usefulness of SDMs in marine conservation. These findings emphasize that we should pay special attention to the selection of cross‐validation methods in SDM studies.}, year = {2025}, eissn = {1600-0587}, orcid-numbers = {Huang, Hongwei/0009-0008-6501-4266; Zhang, Zhixin/0000-0002-3457-2934; Bede-Fazekas, Ákos/0000-0002-2905-338X; Mammola, Stefano/0000-0002-4471-9055; Gu, Jiqi/0000-0002-0081-3509; Zhou, Jinxin/0000-0002-1806-944X; Qu, Junmei/0009-0004-6240-6281; Lin, Qiang/0000-0002-9916-7761} } @article{MTMT:35492353, title = {Identifying ecological factors mediating the spread of three invasive mosquito species: citizen science informed prediction}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/35492353}, author = {Garamszegi, László Zsolt and Soltész, Zoltán and Szentiványi, Tamara and Kurucz, Kornélia and Nagy, Gergely and Bede-Fazekas, Ákos}, doi = {10.1007/s10340-024-01841-7}, journal-iso = {J PEST SCI}, journal = {JOURNAL OF PEST SCIENCE}, volume = {98}, unique-id = {35492353}, issn = {1612-4758}, abstract = {Due to their potential role in pathogen transmission, invasive mosquitoes pose considerable threats to human and animal health. Several studies have identified the most important ecological drivers mediating the establishment and spread of key mosquito species (e.g., Aedes aegypti , and Ae. albopictus ), and made predictions for future distribution. We evaluated the effect of an exhaustive list of environmental predictors on the distribution of three invasive species in Hungary ( Ae. albopictus , Ae. japonicus, and Ae. koreicus) by using the same standards for data collection based on citizen science observations. Current distribution maps of these species were generated from a 5-year survey, then were compared with various predictor maps reflecting climate, habitat type, food supply, traffic, and interspecific competition by using a boosted regression trees approach that resulted in a subset of variables with the strongest impact. The best predictor sets were used to predict the probability of occurrence of the focal species for the whole country, and these predictions based on citizen science were evaluated against the results of an independent recent field surveillance. We uncovered species-specific patterns and found that different predictor sets were selected for the three different species, and only predictions for Ae. albopictus could be validated with direct trapping data. Therefore, citizen science informed distribution maps can be used to identify ecological predictors that determine the spread of invasive mosquitoes, and to estimate risk based on the predicted distribution in the case of Ae. albopictus .}, year = {2025}, eissn = {1612-4766}, pages = {913-928}, orcid-numbers = {Garamszegi, László Zsolt/0000-0001-8920-2183; Szentiványi, Tamara/0000-0001-8123-0374; Kurucz, Kornélia/0000-0001-6190-1265; Nagy, Gergely/0000-0002-0943-2876; Bede-Fazekas, Ákos/0000-0002-2905-338X} } @article{MTMT:35501757, title = {Insight into the dynamics of protected and non-protected carbon pools in four soils with different land uses}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/35501757}, author = {Filep, Tibor and Zacháry, Dóra and Balláné Kovács, Andrea and Király, Csilla and Béni, Áron and Jakab, Gergely Imre and Juhász, Evelin Kármen and Szalai, Zoltán}, doi = {10.1007/s11104-024-07054-2}, journal-iso = {PLANT SOIL}, journal = {PLANT AND SOIL}, unique-id = {35501757}, issn = {0032-079X}, abstract = {Background and aims To provide insight into the patterns of soil organic matter decomposition, changes in the quantity of biopolymers and the correlation between them were followed using 2D correlation spectroscopy (2DCOS) FTIR. Methods Soil organic matter fractions with diferent vegetation/land use (grass, spruce, oak and arable) were examined in a 1-year laboratory incubation. The non-protected organic matter fraction was calculated in terms of particulate organic matter (POM), the carbon stabilized in aggregates as S+A (sand+aggregates), and the mineral-associated organic matter (MAOM) as the s+c (silt and clay) fraction. Results Forest soils (spruce, oak) exhibited high C and N accumulation in the POM fraction (48, 43% and 29, 22% for spruce and oak, respectively) due to the limited decomposition, caused by low pH and high soil C/N ratio. The 2DCOS analysis revealed that carbohydrate-protein and carbohydrate-lignin correlations could be observed most frequently during incubation. The carbohydrate-protein correlation was negative in all cases, for all fractions and for all vegetation types, which suggests biogeochemical linkage between these biopolymers. The temporal order of the spectral changes was widely varied for the vegetation types and especially for the SOM fractions. Lipid/ Lignin → Carbohydrate or Lipid → Lignin/Carboxyl/ Protein sequences were found for the protected carbon pools (S+A and s+c), possibly because of the readily available abundant N compounds present in MAOM. Conclusion Although lipids and lignin are considered as chemically stable materials that commonly remain constant during decomposition, these compounds were found to be very susceptible in all the fractions.}, year = {2025}, eissn = {1573-5036}, orcid-numbers = {Zacháry, Dóra/0000-0001-8248-5571; Jakab, Gergely Imre/0000-0001-5424-1983; Szalai, Zoltán/0000-0001-5267-411X} } @article{MTMT:35600407, title = {Combined effect of a pretreatment and optical settings on the laser diffraction particle size distribution of soils and sediments}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/35600407}, author = {Gresina, Fruzsina and Szalai, Zoltán and Zacháry, Dóra and Kiss, Klaudia and Madarász, Balázs and Angyal, Zsuzsanna and Jakab, Gergely Imre and Darabos, Gabriella and Varga, György}, doi = {10.1007/s11368-024-03933-4}, journal-iso = {J SOIL SEDIMENT}, journal = {JOURNAL OF SOILS AND SEDIMENTS}, volume = {25}, unique-id = {35600407}, issn = {1439-0108}, year = {2025}, eissn = {1614-7480}, pages = {160-178}, orcid-numbers = {Gresina, Fruzsina/0000-0003-2187-6864; Szalai, Zoltán/0000-0001-5267-411X; Zacháry, Dóra/0000-0001-8248-5571; Madarász, Balázs/0000-0003-4201-6919; Angyal, Zsuzsanna/0000-0002-2733-0101; Jakab, Gergely Imre/0000-0001-5424-1983; Darabos, Gabriella/0000-0001-8070-5630; Varga, György/0000-0003-4784-6372} } @article{MTMT:35648725, title = {Wastewater-impacted streams within an agricultural catchment: occurrence, attenuation, and risks of organic micropollutants}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/35648725}, author = {Zrínyi, Zita and Kovács, Nikoletta and Gerencsérné Berta, Renáta and Galambos, Ildikó and Kovács, Barbara and Kucserka, Tamás and Hatvani, István Gábor and Vancsik, Anna and Bauer, László and Szabó, Lili and Szalai, Zoltán and Maász, Gábor and Kondor, Attila Csaba}, doi = {10.1016/j.hazadv.2024.100572}, journal-iso = {Journal of Hazardous Materials Advances}, journal = {JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS ADVANCES}, volume = {17}, unique-id = {35648725}, issn = {2772-4166}, year = {2025}, eissn = {2772-4166}, orcid-numbers = {Kovács, Nikoletta/0000-0002-4602-1005; Hatvani, István Gábor/0000-0002-9262-7315; Vancsik, Anna/0009-0009-8234-5785; Szabó, Lili/0009-0008-4060-2758; Szalai, Zoltán/0000-0001-5267-411X} } @article{MTMT:35670938, title = {Szegvár-Tűzköves késő neolitikus lelőhelyének anthrakológiai és karpológia vizsgálata}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/35670938}, author = {Merkl, Máté and Darabos, Gabriella and Raczky, Pál and Füzesi, András and Hajnalova, Maria and Magyari, Enikő Katalin}, doi = {10.55023/issn.1786-271X.2025-001}, journal-iso = {ARCHEOMETRIAI MŰHELY}, journal = {ARCHEOMETRIAI MŰHELY}, volume = {22}, unique-id = {35670938}, issn = {1786-271X}, abstract = {Szegvár-Tűzköves a magyar neolitikus kutatás egyik kiemelkedő helyszíne, a késő újkőkori tiszai kultúra egyik legjelentősebb lelőhelye. Kutatásunk célja a Szegvár-Tűzköves központi tell részéről szisztematikusan gyűjtött földminták antrakológiai (faszén alapú fajhatározás) és karpológiai (mag-és termésmaradvány) elemzése volt, abból a célból, hogy képet alkothassunk a késő neolitikus települést övező erdők összetételéről és a termesztett növények spektrumáról. A mintavételezés a 2–2,5 m magas tellet határoló árkokból, házakból és gödrökből történt. A tell területéről összesen 12 db objektumból kaptunk értékelhető eredményt. Összesen 842 darab faszenet vizsgáltunk. Az antrakológiai eredményeink alapján, a szegvári lelőhelyen a késő neolitikumban a vízpartok mentén keményfás ártéri ligeterdővel, valamint puhafás fűz- és nyárligettel, illetve égerligettel kell számolnunk. A szárazabb részeken a mai Dnyepertől keletre eső erdős sztyeppe öv mezei szil–kocsányos tölgy (Ulmus minor–Quercus robur) dominanciájú nyílt erdősztyeppel párhuzamba hozható növényzettípust rekonstruálunk. A gabona és a termesztett növényi maradványok száma összesen 342 darab volt, amelyek közül a legnagyobb számban a faji szintre be nem azonosítható gabonák (Cerealia) szemterméstöredékét (81%) találtuk meg, a meghatározható fajok között a tönköly (Triticum spelta) dominált, a többi gabona aránya 1–10% közötti arányban fordult elő. Az alakor és a tönköly cséplésből származó gabonavillája helyben való gabona termesztésre utal. A leletek között a gyomfajok száma és diverzitása alacsony volt, a faj szám minimális volta miatt nem tudtunk következtetést levonni a gabonavetés idejére, az aratás magasságára és a neolitikus lakosság termőhely választására.}, year = {2025}, pages = {1-16}, orcid-numbers = {Darabos, Gabriella/0000-0001-8070-5630; Raczky, Pál/0000-0001-5556-723X; Füzesi, András/0000-0002-5039-8593; Hajnalova, Maria/0000-0002-4537-7157; Magyari, Enikő Katalin/0000-0002-2844-8937} } @book{MTMT:35673003, title = {A Környezeti Tervezési és Nevelési Hálózat koncepciója Bükkszentkereszt fűtési eredetű környezeti és társadalmi problémáinak mérséklésére}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/35673003}, isbn = {9786150226590}, author = {Munkácsy, Béla and Csontos, Csaba Péter and Harmat, Ádám and Nagy, Bence and José, Campos}, publisher = {Environmental Planning and Educatoin Network}, unique-id = {35673003}, year = {2025}, orcid-numbers = {Munkácsy, Béla/0000-0003-4207-1299; Nagy, Bence/0000-0002-1122-0995} } @article{MTMT:35676605, title = {Resilience of alpine lake macroinvertebrate communities to climate change: a view from the South Carpathian Mountains}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/35676605}, author = {Tombor, Eszter and Korponai, János and Begy, R. and Zsigmond, Andreea Rebeka and Wojewódka-Przybył, M. and Hamerlík, L. and Túri, Marianna and Máthé, I. and Kotrys, B. and Płóciennik, M. and Magyari, Enikő Katalin}, doi = {10.1007/s10750-024-05761-6}, journal-iso = {HYDROBIOLOGIA}, journal = {HYDROBIOLOGIA}, unique-id = {35676605}, issn = {0018-8158}, abstract = {Remote mountain lakes experience accelerating ecological change worldwide due to the ongoing warming. In this study, we analyze two alpine lakes, Lake Ana (1940 m) and Lake Peleaga (2122 m), from the Retezat National Park in Romania. The sediment cores cover ~ 400 years, and our aim is to reconstruct critical transitions, the rate of ecosystem change and its driving factors. The extent of human disturbance is weak at these lakes today. Therefore, we assumed the principal role of summer warming in potential ecosystem reorganizations. For verifying this assumption, we use a multi-proxy approach including Pb210/Cs137 dating, chironomid, pollen, Cladocera analyses, SPDU, element concentration, organic matter, total nitrogen, C/N ratio and δ15N measurements, chord-distance-analysis (RoC) and chironomid-based temperature reconstruction. The assemblages indicated cold, oligotrophic environment and remained relatively stable despite climate change and human pressure, in contrast to assemblages studied from higher altitude (> 2300 m) lakes in the Alps. Our temperature reconstructions show warming from the 2000’s, but the results are influenced by fish introduction in the 1990s. We conclude that chironomid communities have not yet passed critical thresholds; the fauna reacted with restrained alterations, which is exceptional in the region, and highlight the importance of altitude and environmental protection.}, keywords = {climate change; Chironomids; Temperature reconstruction; Human impact; Mountain lakes}, year = {2025}, eissn = {1573-5117}, orcid-numbers = {Korponai, János/0000-0003-0211-192X; Magyari, Enikő Katalin/0000-0002-2844-8937} } @article{MTMT:35700161, title = {Limitations and opportunities of using Hotmaps online heat atlas in heat energy planning}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/35700161}, author = {Csontos, Csaba and Harmat, Ádám and Campos, José and Munkácsy, Béla}, doi = {10.54337/ijsepm.8602}, journal-iso = {INT J SUSTAIN ENER PLAN MANAG}, journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SUSTAINABLE ENERGY PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT}, volume = {43}, unique-id = {35700161}, issn = {2246-2929}, abstract = {Rationalising the production and use of thermal energy would be the key to energy transition. However, in most rural areas heat planning and just transition is challenging. Energy geography solutions such as innovative online heat atlases, like Hotmaps are valuable tools for estimating household heat demand at municipality level. The aim of this study was twofold, firstly to validate the Hotmaps database with the help of field-obtained actual consumption data and to determine its usability for local thermal energy planning. Secondly to develop and test a complex methodology supporting the definition of a heating energy mix in a highly diverse landscape and energy mix in a Hungarian rural study area facing coal phase-out. The results confirmed that settlements with residential heat demand above 5,000 MWh/a could rely on the Hotmaps, however, mapping the local heating energy mix can only be done by field data collection, especially where the ratio of the solid fuels is over 50%. The heating energy mix can vastly vary even within a small geographical area which underlines the importance of in-situ rural energy mapping and makes clear the need to develop such complex but replicable methodologies as this paper has.}, year = {2025}, pages = {85-100}, orcid-numbers = {Campos, José/0000-0001-5793-0776; Munkácsy, Béla/0000-0003-4207-1299} }