Paolo Porto is currently Associate Professor in Agricultural Hydraulics and Torrent control, at the University Mediterranea of Reggio Calabria (Italy), and Professor in the field of Physical Geography and Geomorphology at the Kazimierz Wielki University of Bydgoszcz (Poland). He obtained in 1989 his Master degree in Forest Sciences at the University Mediterranea, and he completed his PhD in 1995 in Catchment hydrology and torrent control at the University of Bari (Italy). His research activity was developed with the support of several fellowships spent at the Dept of Civil Engineering of the Colorado State University, USA (6 months), at the Department of Engineering and Agro-Forest Technologies of the University of Palermo, Italy (2 years), at the National Research Council of Cosenza, Italy (4 years), and at the Dept of Geography of the University of Exeter, UK (3 years) where he was appointed as Honorary Member´ from February 2014 to January 2017. His research activity (Scopus H-index=28) in soil erosion, radionuclides, hydrology, and torrent control is well documented in over 100 papers published in international and national journals. Paolo Porto covers also the role of President (2021-2025) of the International Commission on Continental Erosion (IAHS/ICCE), and Vice-President (2022-2025) of the International Association of Sediment and Water Sciences (IASWS).
Emil Fulajtar: Soil scientist working recently at National Agriculture and Food Centre, Soil Science and Conservation Institute in Bratislava, Slovakia, graduated in Geography and Cartography at Comenius University, Bratislava, Slovakia (1987), MSc in Soil Science at University of Ghent, Belgium (1993), PhD in Pedology at Comenius University, Bratislava, Slovakia (2003), was working originally in general pedology, soil genesis, soil classification and soil mapping. Since 1994 he specialised in soil erosion research (measuring, modelling, and mapping of soil erosion) andfurther he specialised in nuclear techniques used in soil science, mainly using fallout radionuclides (FRN) in soil erosion assessment, compound specific stable isotope (CSSI) technique used for identification of sediment sources and cosmic ray neutron sensor (CRNS) using for soil moisture assessment. His major achievements are contributions to study of soil genesis of Chernozems on loess, identification of new vertisol soil type in Slovakia, contributions to modelling of soil erosion using Universal soil loss equation (USLE), developing methods for erosion mapping using remote sensing and extensive measurements of soil erosion rates at erosion plots, elementary watersheds, and with Cs-137 method. These results are summarised in book soil erosion and conservation, two book chapters on soil erosion and a number of research papers. He is also an author of methodological handbook for using Cs-137 method for soil erosion assessment and coauthor of methodological chapter on soil sampling and two editions of Slovak soil classification. Apart of conducting own research he was working many years also in soil research management as scientific secretary at European Commission, COST (Cooperation in Science and Technology) Office (2001-2003), science officer at European Science Foundation, COST Office (2004-2005) and project officer at International Atomic Energy Agency (2006-2007 and 2016-2023) and he is coauthor of a number of research papers presenting the results of erosion research projects conducted in various countries.
Lee Kheng Heng has a PhD in soil science from Massey University, New Zeeland, and has more than 30 years´ experience in soil-plant-water interaction research, agricultural water management, water use efficiency, integrated nutrient-water interactions and diffuse pollution control for sustainable agricultural production systems.
Over nearly 24 years, Dr Heng worked at the Soil and Water Management & CropNutrition (SWMCN) Subprogramme, in the Joint FAO/IAEA Centre of Nuclear Techniques in Food and Agriculture, in Vienna, Austria. Since 2014, she was the Head of SWMCN Section, developing the overall strategy of the Soil Subprogramme. Dr Heng recently (October 2023) retired from the IAEA. During her working period at IAEA she coordinated a number of research project on various aspects of soil water management, developing new techniques of soil moisture measurement such as the cosmic ray neutron sensor (CRNS); using stable isotopes for identification of water pollution from agriculture; using fallout radionuclides (FRN) for assessment of soil erosion, etc. Further she was involved in a great number of technical cooperation projects transferring the nuclear techniques to developing countries, as well as giving lectures at IAEA training activities on new nuclear techniques...