World Journal of Environmental Biosciences

World Journal of Environmental Biosciences

World Journal of Environmental Biosciences

ISSN: 2277-8047


A public health journal serving the public health community and scientists working on matters of public health interest and importance, involving the environment.

About Us
Instructions for Authors

World Journal of Environmental Biosciences, brings articles in all areas related to Environmental science and applied Biology on quarterly basis. this journal welcomes the submission of manuscripts that fit the general criteria of significance and scientific Supremacy.
Aim and Scope

World Journal of Environmental Biosciences is a scientific journal which provides an opportunity to share the information among the medical scientists, biologist and researchers.
Open Access Policy

World journal of environmental biosciences releases all academic papers using the Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 4.0 (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) license. As an open-access journal, all content is provided freely to users and their institutions, with no fees involved. Users are granted the permission to read, download, copy, print, search, or link to the complete articles in the journal, without needing prior consent from the publisher or authors, except for commercial purposes.
Plagiarism Policy

World Journal of Environmental Biosciences will check plagiarism for all the articles before prior publication. If the plagiarism content is observed by editors, peer reviewers or by editorial staff members at any stage of publication process at the time of editing or proof reading will be communicate to author to rewrite the manuscript.
Associations

Recent Articles

2025 Volume 14 Issue 2
Assessment of Potential Surface Runoff in Tulasi Watershed of Kolhapur Using NRSC-CN Method
Vikramsinh Subhashrao Pawar-Patil, Abdulwahhab Jasim Mahdi, Ashish Vilas Mane, Sachin Shantaram Panhalkar, Sambhaji Dnyaneshwar Shinde, Sainath Aher
Indian watersheds form an important part of the contiguous water resources , particularly in the changed environments, which leads to urbanization and affects the climatic pattern.  A concern of sustainable watershed management relates to the runoff assessment, as excessive runoff can cause flooding, while insufficient runoff can lead to water scarcity.  In the current work, model has taken a typical TULASI watershed in the Kolhapur (Maharashtra) mountain range, and the approach is based on the
2025 Volume 14 Issue 4
Emerging Trends in Restorative Dental Materials: Review Article
Nada Ahmad Alamoudi, Asim Abdullah Aldhali, Abdulaziz Mohammed Alolyet, Esraa HamdanA ALjohani, Alaa Ghaleb Huraib, Faisal Fahad Alotaibi, Lulah Ali Alshabi, Yara Mohammed Ali Alshehri, Zainab Yaser Kheyami, Abduljabbar Ali Alzahrani
Restorative dental materials have undergone a marked evolution over the past decade, driven by the need to improve restoration longevity, reduce secondary caries, and enhance biological integration within the complex oral environment. Contemporary research increasingly moves beyond passive structural replacement toward multifunctional materials capable of interacting dynamically with dental tissues, oral biofilms, and environmental stimuli. This narrative review synthesizes peer-reviewed literat
2025 Volume 14 Issue 3
Physiotherapy Role in Multiple Sclerosis Management: Review Article
Mohammed Maher Saqqa, Hamed Jamal Banoon, Amani Mohammad Sheikhein, Maram Ali Jasser, Raad Abdulrahman Aljohani, Raneem Ahmed Altalal, Khaled Ali Basheri, Matarh Ahmed Hadi Sanawi, Mohammed Abbas Alnakhli, Mohammed Muslim Alblowi, Alanoud Essa Jarram, Taghred Suleman Zailaei
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic, immune-mediated disorder of the central nervous system characterized by progressive impairments in mobility, balance, strength, fatigue, and participation in daily life. While pharmacological disease-modifying therapies primarily target inflammatory activity, they exert limited influence on established disability and many functionally relevant symptoms. Physiotherapy therefore represents a cornerstone of non-pharmacological management across the MS disease s
2025 Volume 14 Issue 2
The Efficacy of “Pre-habilitation” in Primary Care for Geriatric Fall Prevention: A Narrative Review
Wael Muzi Alanazi, Anas Hotan Alshamrani, Mohammed Saeed Algadmi, Aeshah Abdulaziz Alkandari, Fatema Sayed Hashem Husain, Hamed Jamal Banoon, Lama Bakheet Salam Aljohani, Shahad Bakheet Aljohani, Moyad Wassel Mokhtar, Rukhmah Sanaullah, Sarah Mamdouh Allaf, Musab Nasser Abu Summah, Dawoud Abdullah Mohzari
Falls represent a major public health concern among older adults, contributing to significant morbidity, mortality, and healthcare costs. Community-dwelling geriatric populations experience falls at rates of 20-30% annually, with higher risks in those with frailty, impaired balance, or prior falls. Traditional fall prevention strategies in primary care have emphasized reactive approaches following incidents, but emerging concepts such as “pre-habilitation”—proactive interventions aimed at enhanc
2025 Volume 14 Issue 1
Sarcopenic Obesity Evaluation and Management in Primary Care: A Narrative Review
Wael Muzil Al Anazi, Khaled Abdulrahman Habeeb, Atheer Falah Alahmadi, Ibrahim Yousef Alajaj, Saeed Mubarak Alahmari, Abdulhadi Abdullah AlHammad, Hassan Saeed Alshahrani, Ghazal Mahmoud Shalabi, Rinad Sameer Khalefa, Abdulmajeed Zaher Alzaher, Mohammed Maher Saqqa, Fatimah Fadhel Alshammari, Omar Bakr Algaihab
Sarcopenic obesity, the coexistence of excess adiposity and impaired skeletal muscle mass, strength, and physical performance, is increasingly prevalent due to population aging and the global obesity epidemic. It carries a disproportionate burden of adverse outcomes—including frailty, falls, disability, cardiometabolic disease, reduced quality of life, and mortality—yet remains under-recognized in primary care, where reliance on body mass index can mask abnormal body composition and functional d
2025 Volume 14 Issue 4
A Conceptual Model Linking Environmental Degradation and Social Resilience Thresholds under Climate Stress
Thabo M. Nkosi, Lerato P. Maseko, Nomsa Dlamini, Sipho Khumalo, Johan van der Merwe, Priya Naidoo
Climate change exacerbates environmental degradation, posing profound challenges to social systems worldwide. This conceptual manuscript introduces a novel theoretical framework that elucidates the threshold-based coupling between ecological degradation and social resilience under persistent climate stress. Drawing on recent peer-reviewed literature, we synthesize key concepts from ecology and social sciences to argue that environmental thresholds —points where incremental changes lead to abrupt

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2025 Volume 14 Issue 4
Environmental Justice in the Anthropocene: A Review of Methodological Biases in Impact Assessment Studies
Erik Johansson, Jack Thompson, Emily Parker, Anna Lindström
The Anthropocene epoch, characterized by profound human-induced alterations to Earth's systems, has amplified environmental injustices, disproportionately affecting marginalized communities through climate change, pollution, biodiversity loss, and resource extraction. Impact assessment studies, including environmental impact assessments (EIAs) and social impact assessments (SIAs), serve as critical tools for evaluating these effects and informing policy. However, methodological biases in the
2025 Volume 14 Issue 4
Invisible Pollutants Revisited: A Review of Emerging Environmental Risks from Digitalization and Data Infrastructure
Lucas Moreau, Camille D. Bernard, Pierre L. Martin, Amina E. Diallo
The rapid digitalization of society has ushered in an era of unprecedented connectivity and data-driven innovation, yet it has also introduced a suite of "invisible pollutants" – environmental externalities that are often overlooked in discussions of sustainability. This narrative review reexamines these risks, conceptualizing data centers, digital waste streams, and escalating energy demands as novel forms of pollution that contribute to climate change, resource depletion, and ecological degrad
2025 Volume 14 Issue 3
Reconstructing Global Environmental Risk Narratives Using Large-Scale Text Mining of Scientific Dental Literature
Sung Hoon Kim, Ji Yeon Park, Min Jae Choi, Hyun Woo Lee, Ara Kim
The escalating global environmental crisis poses profound challenges to various sectors, including dentistry, where environmental risks intersect with oral health outcomes and professional practices. This conceptual paper proposes a novel theoretical framework for reconstructing narratives surrounding global environmental risks within scientific dental literature through large-scale text mining. By integrating concepts from environmental sustainability, narrative theory, and computational lingui
2025 Volume 14 Issue 2
From Local Pollution to Planetary Boundaries: Reframing Environmental Contamination through Multi-Scale Systems Reviews
Hassan A. El-Sayed, Mariam K. Nassar, Youssef M. Farouk, Salma R. Ibrahim
Environmental contamination has long been addressed primarily at local scales, focusing on site-specific pollution events and their immediate ecological and human health impacts. However, the escalating complexity of global environmental challenges necessitates a reframing of contamination through multi-scale systems perspectives, extending from local sources to planetary boundaries. This narrative review synthesizes recent literature to explore how local pollutants aggregate and interact across
2025 Volume 14 Issue 2
A Counterfactual Analysis of Environmental Policy Pathways Using Scenario Recombination Techniques
Daniel P. Green, Laura M. Stevens, Richard H. Cole, Amanda J. Brooks
Environmental policy formulation faces inherent uncertainties in predicting future outcomes due to complex interactions among socio-economic, ecological, and climatic factors. Traditional approaches emphasize forecast-based predictions, which often fail to account for alternative trajectories that could have emerged under different policy configurations. This conceptual paper introduces a novel theoretical framework centered on policy counterfactual recombination, a method that systematically di
2025 Volume 14 Issue 2
Environmental Tipping Points in Human-Dominated Landscapes: A Cross-Ecosystem Review of Early Warning Signals
Marco Rinaldi, Sofia B. Conti, Luca Ferraro, Giulia Moretti
Human-dominated landscapes, encompassing terrestrial, freshwater, and urban ecosystems, are increasingly vulnerable to abrupt and potentially irreversible changes known as tipping points, driven by anthropogenic pressures such as climate change, habitat fragmentation, and pollution. These tipping points represent critical thresholds where gradual stressors precipitate nonlinear shifts in ecosystem states, often leading to degraded functionality and loss of biodiversity. Early warning signals (EW

Archive

2025 Volume 14


2024 Volume 13


2023 Volume 12


2022 Volume 11


2021 Volume 10


2020 Volume 9


2019 Volume 8


2018 Volume 7


2017 Volume 6


2016 Volume 5


2015 Volume 4


2014 Volume 3


2013 Volume 2


2012 Volume 1


2025 Volume 14 Issue 4

Cavia Porcellus: Impact of Dietary Organic Acid Supplementation on Productive Performance, pH, and Intestinal Development
Diego Masaquiza, José Zapata, Hamilton Intriago, Sandra Castañeda
Traditional Medicinal Plants Utilization by Tribal Communities in Kalvarayan Hills of Tamil Nadu: An Analysis Utilization of Medicinal Plants
Kaviya Palanikumar, Natarajan Manivel, Sharmi Rajendren
Atropa belladonna Poisoning in Children: A Case Report and Environmental Toxicology Perspective
Arlinda Maloku, Aferdita Mustafa, Abdurrahim Gerguri
Invisible Pollutants Revisited: A Review of Emerging Environmental Risks from Digitalization and Data Infrastructure
Lucas Moreau, Camille D. Bernard, Pierre L. Martin, Amina E. Diallo
A Conceptual Model Linking Environmental Degradation and Social Resilience Thresholds under Climate Stress
Thabo M. Nkosi, Lerato P. Maseko, Nomsa Dlamini, Sipho Khumalo, Johan van der Merwe, Priya Naidoo
Environmental Justice in the Anthropocene: A Review of Methodological Biases in Impact Assessment Studies
Erik Johansson, Jack Thompson, Emily Parker, Anna Lindström
Emerging Trends in Restorative Dental Materials: Review Article
Nada Ahmad Alamoudi, Asim Abdullah Aldhali, Abdulaziz Mohammed Alolyet, Esraa HamdanA ALjohani, Alaa Ghaleb Huraib, Faisal Fahad Alotaibi, Lulah Ali Alshabi, Yara Mohammed Ali Alshehri, Zainab Yaser Kheyami, Abduljabbar Ali Alzahrani

WORLD JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL BIOSCIENCES

World Journal of Environmental Biosciences is designed to publish the most rousing and novel researches with respect to the subjects of Environmental Biology and to impart, a rapid turn-around time possible for reviewing and publishing, and to disperse the articles freely for research, teaching and reference purposes.  The journal concentrates on scientists and practitioners in all areas of environmental science where human health, fortune and well-being are involved, either directly or indirectly.

World Journal of Environmental Biosciences is a public health journal serving the public health community and scientists working on matters of public health interest and importance, involving the environment.  World Journal of Environmental Biosciences provides a worldwide coverage for published articles in the journal with its Open Access Policy. And also the journal furnishes an assurance of peer review process for the submitted manuscripts for quality of publishing. All works published by World Journal of Environmental Biosciences is under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. Thus, authors are fostered to submit their manuscripts from all over the globe.

Copyright © 2026 World Journal of Environmental Biosciences. Authors retain copyright of their article if they are accepted for publication.
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