International Journal of Environment and Climate Change
This research work applied geospatial and weight of evidence approach to ecological risk assessme... more This research work applied geospatial and weight of evidence approach to ecological risk assessment for quantifying environmental exposure to oil pollution in the Niger Delta. Spatial data for Pipelines, Oil spills and Land Cover were used to quantify the extent of Ecological resources exposed to oil pollution using a data-process model. Regional scale risk assessment was done using the combination of geospatial and statistical approaches. Hotspot and Proximity analysis were used for geospatial analysis while weight of evidence was adopted for statistical computation. Ecological resources were identified from land cover maps and ranked according to their perceived importance. Hotspots of oil spill incidents were determined using spatial autocorrelation. Ecological resource vulnerability was determined using buffer zoning of 5 km and 10 km respectively as high and low risk zones, with sample maps made to show extents of resources at risk. Areal extent of ecological resources at ris...
Environmentally suitable habitats of Aedes albopictus (Ae. albopictus) in Europe are identified b... more Environmentally suitable habitats of Aedes albopictus (Ae. albopictus) in Europe are identified by several modeling studies. However, it is noticeable that even after decades of invasion process in Europe, the vector mosquito has not yet been established in all its environmentally suitable areas. Natural barriers and human-mediated transport play a role, but the potential of wind speed to explain Ae. albopictus’ absences and its inability to establish in its suitable areas are largely unknown. This study therefore evaluates the potential of wind speed as an explanatory parameter of the non-occurrence of Ae. albopictus. We developed a global ecological niche model with relevant environmental parameters including wind speed and projected it to current climatic conditions in Europe. Differences in average wind speed between areas of occurrence and non-occurrence of Ae. albopictus within its modeled suitable areas were tested for significance. A second global ecological niche model was ...
International Journal of Environment and Climate Change
This research work applied geospatial and weight of evidence approach to ecological risk assessme... more This research work applied geospatial and weight of evidence approach to ecological risk assessment for quantifying environmental exposure to oil pollution in the Niger Delta. Spatial data for Pipelines, Oil spills and Land Cover were used to quantify the extent of Ecological resources exposed to oil pollution using a data-process model. Regional scale risk assessment was done using the combination of geospatial and statistical approaches. Hotspot and Proximity analysis were used for geospatial analysis while weight of evidence was adopted for statistical computation. Ecological resources were identified from land cover maps and ranked according to their perceived importance. Hotspots of oil spill incidents were determined using spatial autocorrelation. Ecological resource vulnerability was determined using buffer zoning of 5 km and 10 km respectively as high and low risk zones, with sample maps made to show extents of resources at risk. Areal extent of ecological resources at ris...
Environmentally suitable habitats of Aedes albopictus (Ae. albopictus) in Europe are identified b... more Environmentally suitable habitats of Aedes albopictus (Ae. albopictus) in Europe are identified by several modeling studies. However, it is noticeable that even after decades of invasion process in Europe, the vector mosquito has not yet been established in all its environmentally suitable areas. Natural barriers and human-mediated transport play a role, but the potential of wind speed to explain Ae. albopictus’ absences and its inability to establish in its suitable areas are largely unknown. This study therefore evaluates the potential of wind speed as an explanatory parameter of the non-occurrence of Ae. albopictus. We developed a global ecological niche model with relevant environmental parameters including wind speed and projected it to current climatic conditions in Europe. Differences in average wind speed between areas of occurrence and non-occurrence of Ae. albopictus within its modeled suitable areas were tested for significance. A second global ecological niche model was ...
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Papers by RIDWAN SHITTU