S
Shenglu Zhou
Researcher at Nanjing University
Publications - 87
Citations - 3230
Shenglu Zhou is an academic researcher from Nanjing University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Soil water & Computer science. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 72 publications receiving 2035 citations. Previous affiliations of Shenglu Zhou include Ministry of Land and Resources of the People's Republic of China & Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Heavy metals in wheat grain: Assessment of potential health risk for inhabitants in Kunshan, China
TL;DR: Health risk due to the added effects of eight HMs was significant for rural children and rural adults, but not for urban adults and urban children, while non-carcinogenic risks presented values inside the safe interval.
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Evaluation of spatial and temporal changes of soil quality based on geostatistical analysis in the hill region of subtropical China
Bo Sun,Shenglu Zhou,Qiguo Zhao +2 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the spatial and temporal variability of soil properties and changes of soil quality in a hill region of subtropical China using geostatistical methods were studied. But the results of the study were limited.
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Heavy metals in food crops, soil, and water in the Lihe River Watershed of the Taihu Region and their potential health risks when ingested.
TL;DR: The spatial distribution pattern of the IR values among the exposed populations in the study area showed high values in the eastern and middle parts, with maximum values >5, and lowvalues in the western part, with minimum values <2, consistent with the distributions of the industries and the population.
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Spatio-temporal assessment of urbanization impacts on ecosystem services: Case study of Nanjing City, China
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a conceptual framework quantifying how urbanization influences the ecosystem services in a typical city (Nanjing) of China, separating the city into three urbanization categories (developing urban, developed urban and rural areas) and quantified the status of six critical ecosystem services (food supply, carbon sequestration, soil water storage, air pollution removal, habitat suitability, and recreation potential).
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Microplastics in soils: A review of methods, occurrence, fate, transport, ecological and environmental risks.
TL;DR: A selection of papers is reviewed and a tentative standardized method for analyzing particles in complex matrices is extrapolated, helpful for providing an important roadmap and inspiration for the research methods and framework of soil MPs and facilitates the development of waste management and remediation strategies for regional soil MP contamination.