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Zita Sebesvari
Researcher at United Nations University
Publications - 73
Citations - 3164
Zita Sebesvari is an academic researcher from United Nations University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ecosystem services & Disaster risk reduction. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 66 publications receiving 2121 citations. Previous affiliations of Zita Sebesvari include University of Oldenburg.
Papers
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Sea Level Rise and Implications for Low Lying Islands, Coasts and Communities
Michael Oppenheimer,Bruce Glavovic,Jochen Hinkel,Roderik S. W. van de Wal,Alexandre K. Magnan,Amro Abd-Elgawad,Rongshuo Cai,Miguel Cifuentes-Jara,Robert M. DeConto,Tuhin Ghosh,John E. Hay,Federico Ignacio Isla,Ben Marzeion,Benoit Meyssignac,Zita Sebesvari +14 more
TL;DR: In this paper, Abd Elgawad et al. discuss the sea level rise and its implications for low lying islands, coastlines and communities in the Middle East and Asia.
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Pesticide management and their residues in sediments and surface and drinking water in the Mekong Delta, Vietnam.
TL;DR: It is shown that household level pesticide management remains suboptimal in the Mekong Delta and co-occurrence of several pesticides in the samples indicate a considerable chronic exposure of biota and humans to pesticides.
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Tipping from the Holocene to the Anthropocene: How threatened are major world deltas?
Fabrice G. Renaud,James P. M. Syvitski,James P. M. Syvitski,Zita Sebesvari,Saskia E. Werners,Hartwig Kremer,Claudia Kuenzer,Ramachandran Ramesh,Ad Jeuken,jana Friedrich +9 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied the long-term effects of rapid human interventions in coastal deltas and showed that highly managed states may allow, under specific conditions, for interventions leading to increasingly resilient systems.
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Pesticide pollution of multiple drinking water sources in the Mekong Delta, Vietnam: evidence from two provinces.
TL;DR: Overall, this study failed to identify a clean water source in the Mekong Delta with respect to pesticide pollution, and it is therefore urgent to understand further and address drinking water-related health risk issues in the region.
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Multifunctionality of floodplain landscapes: relating management options to ecosystem services
Stefan Schindler,Stefan Schindler,Zita Sebesvari,Christian Damm,Katrin Euller,Volker Mauerhofer,Anna Schneidergruber,Marianna Biró,Franz Essl,Franz Essl,Robert Kanka,Sophie G. Lauwaars,Christiane Schulz-Zunkel,Theo van der Sluis,Michaela Kropik,Viktor Gasso,Andreas Krug,Martin T. Pusch,Klaus Peter Zulka,Werner Lazowski,Christa Hainz-Renetzeder,Klaus Henle,Thomas Wrbka +22 more
TL;DR: In this paper, an expert-based qualitative conceptual model for the assessment of impacts of landscape scale interventions on multifunctionality has been developed for European floodplain landscapes as an example.