Sustainability of Wetlands in the Eyes of the New Generation of Environmental Engineering Students
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Background
2.1. Conceptualization: The Necessity of Environmental Education
2.2. Wetlands as the Functional Ecosystems
3. Data and Methodology
3.1. Targeted Research Group
3.2. Data Collection
- What approaches do you suggest, to deal with this situation?
- What type of data must be collected for further investigation?
- What will be the final solutions for eliminating this odor in the long run?
3.3. Data Analysis
4. Results
4.1. The First Part of the Question
4.2. Second Part of the Question
4.3. Third Part of the Question
“Citizens should improve awareness of the importance of wetlands and protect them by more publicity”(code 5)
“Promote education to the local people and enterprises to protect the steady-state”(code 29)
“Educating people in Zone A to know the importance of protecting wetland”(code 17)
“Teach residents how to protect the wetland … punishing illegal behavior damaging wetland”(code 13)
“Develop the landscape value and ecological value of wetlands so that more people can pay attention to wetland”(code 32)
5. Discussion
5.1. Approaches to Detecting the Wetland Odor
5.2. What Types of Data?
5.3. Long-Term Solutions for Tackling the Wetland Odor
5.4. Research Limitations
5.5. Active Learning
6. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Subject | Methodology | Number of Participants (Age Group) | Source |
---|---|---|---|
Climate change awareness | Online questionnaire | 792 students (13 to 16 years) | [13] |
Nature and culture | In-depth interviews | 430 students (13 to 24 years) | [10] |
Ownership rights and environmental protection | Questionnaire | 1900 students (undergraduate) | [15] |
Jaguar conservation | Questionnaire, interview, open-ended questions | 151 students (11 to 14 years; mean age 12.63) and their fathers (172 adults; mean age 46.38) | [11] |
Fossil fuel and climate justice | Interviews | 21 teachers (primarily grades 7–12), three out-of-classroom educational employees, two administrators, as well as three representatives from organizations | [16] |
Crafting materials and sustainability | Camera recording | 15 students (Grades 3–9) | [18] |
Sustainable development | Focus group | 34 teacher instructors (n/a) | [19] |
Crosscutting environmental education | Holding workshop | (n/a) (Environmental education experts and practitioners) | [1] |
Environmental identity, decision-making process, and behavior | Three-part survey | 299 undergraduate students | [20] |
College students and nature | Survey using Qualtrics platform | 287 undergraduate students | [21] |
varied | Literature review | n/a | [22,23,24] |
Strategy (% of the Total) | Approaches | Measures | # of the Total Responses (n = 62) | % of the Total |
---|---|---|---|---|
Prevention (15%) | Physical and Biological | Controlling input water, sewage control, filtering, prevention of invasive species, sewage treatment | 9 | 15% |
Identification (55%) | Sampling | Sludge analysis, water sampling, soil sampling, air sampling, analysis of pollutants, microbiological analysis, effluent sampling | 20 | 32.5% |
Social | Questionnaire | 5 | 8% | |
Site investigation | 9 | 14.5% | ||
Restoration (24%) | Tree planting, rubbish collection, increasing water flow, wetland purification using bacteria | 15 | 24% | |
Answers irrelevant to the question (6%) | Proclaiming a Protected Area, public awareness, banning fishing, reducing industrial development | 4 | 6% |
Data (% of the Total) | Data Gathering | Data Description |
---|---|---|
Water (71%) | aqueous solution | microbiology, BOD, COD, heavy metals, pH, turbidity, ammonia, total phosphorus, total nitrogen, temperature, water properties, oil, organic carbon, color, sulfide, flora and fauna, suspended solids, volatile organic acids |
field observation | water level, wastewater, wetland features, water inflow, water outflow, water depth, water storage, sewage, water circulation | |
hydrology survey | hydrological regime | |
Soil (8%) | soil sample | soil properties, soil microbiology |
Air (8%) | air sample | gaseous components |
synoptic station | climatic variables | |
Vegetation (8%) | plant sample | number of species, diversity of species |
Humanistic (5%) | field observation | local people inquiry, surrounding industries |
Solution (% of the Total) | Measures |
---|---|
Physical (50%) | wastewater control, fertilizer control, water replenishment, removal of pollution sources, restoration of environment, sludge removal, revegetation, fecal pollution control, rubbish removal, pesticide control |
Legal and Planning (32%) | law enactment, law enforcement, devising sustainable development plan, public awareness, monitoring, devising a long-term plan, proclaiming a Protected Area, wetland management, setting the standard |
Chemical (9%) | adding oxygen, chemical remediation, nutrient control, eutrophication control, aeration |
Biological (9%) | biological remediation, microorganism control, bioremediation |
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Amiraslani, F. Sustainability of Wetlands in the Eyes of the New Generation of Environmental Engineering Students. Conservation 2021, 1, 182-195. https://doi.org/10.3390/conservation1030015
Amiraslani F. Sustainability of Wetlands in the Eyes of the New Generation of Environmental Engineering Students. Conservation. 2021; 1(3):182-195. https://doi.org/10.3390/conservation1030015
Chicago/Turabian StyleAmiraslani, Farshad. 2021. "Sustainability of Wetlands in the Eyes of the New Generation of Environmental Engineering Students" Conservation 1, no. 3: 182-195. https://doi.org/10.3390/conservation1030015
APA StyleAmiraslani, F. (2021). Sustainability of Wetlands in the Eyes of the New Generation of Environmental Engineering Students. Conservation, 1(3), 182-195. https://doi.org/10.3390/conservation1030015