Publications by authors named "Fernando A L Pacheco"

Ensuring the sustainability and security of groundwater resources requires identification of region-specific challenges and solutions to accommodate water needs in diverse sectors, including ecosystems. They are related to extensive variations in natural conditions (e.g.

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Soil conservation adheres to various United Nations Sustainable Development Goals while in Brazil is a constitutional obligation. To attain the goals and fulfil the obligation, laws, policies, governance and science must be imbricated to deliver suitable conservation solutions for the long term, namely appropriate to positively influence other downstream chains such as the food chain. However, in Brazil, a major world producer and exporter of food, weaknesses were recently diagnosed by judicial authorities concerning soil governance and coordinated land use policies.

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With the growing concerns about the protection of ecosystem functions and services, governments have developed public policies and organizations have produced an awesome volume of digital data freely available through their websites. On the other hand, advances in data acquisition through remote sensed sources and processing through geographic information systems (GIS) and statistical tools, allowed an unprecedent capacity to manage ecosystems efficiently. However, the real-world scenario in that regard remains paradoxically challenging.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the environmental impact of the B1 tailings dam break in Brumadinho, Brazil, which caused significant soil degradation through the loss of soil organic carbon (SOC).
  • The analysis revealed that SOC levels in zones closer to the dam dropped dramatically from 2017 to 2023, highlighting the long-term consequences of the disaster on the soil quality in affected areas.
  • Overall, the research emphasizes how tailings dam failures have widespread effects on local ecosystems, adversely affecting both directly impacted lands and surrounding watersheds.
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Tailings dams' disasters begin a stage of river water contamination with no endpoint at first sight. But when the river was formerly used for public water supply and the use was suspended as consequence of a dam break, a time window for safe suspension lift must be anticipated to help water managers. The purpose of this study was to seek for that moment in the case of Brumadinho dam disaster which occurred in 2019 and injected millions of cubic meters of iron- and manganese-rich tailings into the Paraopeba River, leading to the suspension of public water supply to Belo Horizonte metropolitan region with this resource, until now.

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Following the B1 dam collapse at Córrego do Feijão Mine, actions were taken to address environmental damage and enhance the quality of water in the Paraopeba River. Natural processes in the river involve gradual reduction of contamination through dispersion and downstream transportation of tailings-a slow, nature-driven process. Dredging, a human intervention, aimed to expedite recovery.

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In the modern urban space, green infrastructures have been gaining increasing relevance due to their positive impacts on sustainability issues, visual appeal, and the well-being of individuals. On the other hand, environmental sustainability has become mandatory in the agenda of governments and organizations. Thus, a systematic analysis on the efficiency and sustainability of green facades and roofs spanning key applications, benefits and implementation constraints is welcome.

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Understanding the origins of sediment transport in river systems is crucial for effective watershed management, especially after catastrophic events. This information is essential for the development of integrated strategies that guarantee water security in river basins. The present study aimed to investigate the rupture of the B1 tailings dam of the Córrego do Feijão mine, which drastically affected the Brumadinho region (Minas Gerais, Brazil).

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Article Synopsis
  • Human actions can harm ecosystems, which can lead to serious negative effects on services they provide; using the Conservation Use Potential (PCU) framework can help assess land use and management strategies in river basins.
  • By analyzing PCU alongside land uses, the study identified mismatches between current practices and natural suitability, helping to address environmental conflicts in areas like the Upper Rio das Velhas basin in Brazil.
  • The research demonstrated that appropriate land management, based on PCU assessments, can enhance ecosystem services like aquifer recharge and erosion resistance, providing a framework for developing effective public policies.
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The use of tailings dams in the mining industry is recurrent and a matter of concern given the risk of collapse. The planning of tailings dam's emplacement usually attends construction design criteria and site geotechnical properties, but often neglects the risk of installing the depositional facilities in potentially unstable landscapes, namely those characterized by steep slopes and(or) high drainage densities. In order to help bridging this gap, the present study developed a framework model whereby geomorphologic vulnerability is assessed by a set of morphometric parameters (e.

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Groundwater helps overcoming periods of drought buffering their effects on water supply to people, natural ecosystems and the economy. Following the latest Conference of the Parties (COP27), groundwater research gained renewed impulse because the Parties committed themselves to invest on environmental dimensions of water security related with aquifer characterization and protection. In that context, the purpose of this study was to help providing an integrated assessment to some fundamental issues about groundwater security, summarized as the three "how"s: how much, how ready and for how long can groundwater be delivered from watersheds? A complementary goal was to identify and quantify the role of watershed characteristics controlling these "how"s.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study examines Payment for Environmental Services (PES) schemes in Brazil, highlighting the lack of clear definitions and consensus on ecosystem services among various research efforts.
  • Approximately one-third of the PES schemes reviewed failed to specify which services were eligible for payment, with a significant focus on carbon and water in the Amazon and Atlantic Forest biomes.
  • The authors argue for standardizing terminology using the Common International Classification of Ecosystem Services (CICES), as clarity is essential for effective public policy and the overall success of PES initiatives in Brazil.
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Article Synopsis
  • The integration of landscape vulnerability and local demands is crucial for effectively restoring ecosystem services in agricultural landscapes through agroforestry systems.
  • The developed spatial hierarchization methodology serves as a decision support tool to identify priority areas for agroforestry interventions, using Multicriteria Decision Analysis in GIS software.
  • The resulting model categorizes areas based on their suitability for agroforestry into four priority levels and offers insights into managing land use pressures, conserving natural habitats, and addressing local agricultural needs.
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Water security is an expression of resilience. In the recent past, scientists and public organizations have built considerable work around this concept launched in 2013 by the United Nations as "the capacity of a population to safeguard sustainable access to adequate quantities of acceptable quality water for sustaining livelihoods, human well-being, and socio-economic development, for ensuring protection against water-borne pollution and water-related disasters, and for preserving ecosystems in a climate of peace and political stability". In the 27th Conference of the Parties (COP27), held in Sharm El-Sheikh (Egypt) in last November, water security was considered a priority in the climate agenda, especially in the adaption and loss and damage axes.

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Riverine habitats are essential ecotones that bridge aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems, providing multiple ecosystem services. This study analyses the potential use of high-resolution satellite imagery, provided by the WorldView-2 satellite, in order to assess its viability for monitoring riparian ecosystems. It is performed by calculating the riparian strip quality index (RSQI) and calibrating it with the riparian quality index (QBR).

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The method presented in this study assesses groundwater contamination risk using a L-Matrix system approach. The L-Matrix in this case is a cartesian diagram where the XX-axis represents aquifer vulnerability (0≤V≤1) determined by the well-known DRASTIC model, and the YY-axis represents the potential hazardousness (0≤H≤1) of an activity (infrastructural development, industrial activities, livestock and agriculture) measured by a European Commission approach. The diagram is divided into four regions, the boundaries of which are set to V = 0.

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The present study aimed to investigate the rupture of B1 tailings dam of Córrego do Feijão mine, which drastically affected the region of Brumadinho (Minas Gerais, Brazil). The contamination of water resources reached 155.3 km from the dam site.

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Starting with a log-linear relationship between groundwater discharge per unit drainage area (/ ), hydraulic turnover time () and aquifer mobile storage (), this study builds a groundwater security method at catchment scale. The method embeds previously published approaches to calculate / , and , and relies solely on stream flow discharges and watershed areas. The ability to build a method on a couple of variables is remarkable.

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The ecological functions restoration in agricultural areas is a major challenge on a landscape scale. In the specific case of active restoration through Agroforestry Systems (AFS), the absence of a specific direction hinders ecological restoration processes, especially in regions that prefer intensive agriculture. Thus, this study aims to develop a Spatial Indicator of Priority Areas to guide Agroforestry Systems implementation in agricultural landscapes.

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This study investigated the collapse of B1 mine-tailings dam that occurred in 25 January 2019 and severely affected the Brumadinho region (Minas Gerais state, Brazil) socially, economically and environmentally. As regards water resources, the event impacted the Paraopeba River in the first 155.3 km counted from the dam site, meaning nearly half the main water course downstream of B1.

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The rupture of mine-tailings dams can severely contaminate rivers, because released tailings can interact with water for years keeping contaminant concentrations high. The general purpose of this study was to examine the rupture of B1 tailings dam in Ferro-Carvão stream (municipality of Brumadinho, state of Minas Gerais, Brazil), which occurred in 25 January 2019 and contaminated the main water course (Paraopeba River) with 2.8 Mm of metal-rich tailings.

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Cyano-HABs are proliferating around the world due to anthropogenic nutrient enrichment of freshwater bodies. This study seeks to obtain a holistic vision over the various threats that affect the Cyano-HABs of Umia basin and especially of A Baxe reservoir (Galicia, NW Spain), through the method of Partial least squares path modelling (PLS-PM). The A Baxe reservoirs is a fundamental source of drinking water supply to surrounding dwellings.

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In January 25, 2019, the B1 dam of Córrego do Feijão mine located in Brumadinho municipality (Minas Gerais, Brazil) collapsed and injected nearly 2.8 Mm of iron (Fe)- and manganese (Mn)-rich tailings in the Paraopeba River. This study assessed the contribution of tailings to the contamination of sediments and water by those metals.

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