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26 pages, 390 KB  
Article
Ecological Nirvana and the Agency of the Non-Human: A Material Ecocritical Reading of Musan Cho Oh-hyun’s Zen Sijo
by Thi Ha An Nguyen
Religions 2026, 17(6), 713; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17060713 - 14 Jun 2026
Viewed by 176
Abstract
In the Anthropocene, the environmental crisis necessitates a radical repositioning of the human-nature relationship. This paper examines the sijo poetry in Musan Cho Oh-hyun’s For Nirvana through an interdisciplinary framework bridging Zen philosophy with material ecocriticism. The study elucidates how Musan deconstructs anthropocentric [...] Read more.
In the Anthropocene, the environmental crisis necessitates a radical repositioning of the human-nature relationship. This paper examines the sijo poetry in Musan Cho Oh-hyun’s For Nirvana through an interdisciplinary framework bridging Zen philosophy with material ecocriticism. The study elucidates how Musan deconstructs anthropocentric exceptionalism by restoring agency to the non-human world. Textual analysis reveals three arguments. First, elemental forces like wind and waves are subjectified as primordial teachers through mujō-seppō (non-sentient beings preaching the Dharma), dismantling sovereign human scriptural authority. Second, visceral encounters with animals and insects critique logocentric domination, proposing “epistemological silence” and “radical humility” as alternative eco-politics. Finally, bodily decay and trans-corporeal porosity are reframed as generative pathways toward a radical “ecological Nirvana”—a physical matrix of cyclical renewal. By synthesizing Jane Bennett’s vital materialism with Dōgen’s Zen vision of “walking mountains”, this study deploys a Zen materialism lens that enriches Western theory with the Buddhist soteriology of compassion (karuna). Ultimately, Musan reconfigures Nirvana not as an escapist transcendence, but as a profound somatic descent into the material mesh, where ultimate spiritual realization lies in the ego’s total dissolution into the “walking, talking minerals” of a sacred, suffering ecosystem. Full article
33 pages, 2466 KB  
Review
Harmful Algal Blooms and Tourism Systems: Health Risks, Behavioral and Economic Impacts, and Bidirectional Feedback
by Chanjuan Li, Na Guo and Zhongliang Sun
Sustainability 2026, 18(12), 6116; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18126116 - 14 Jun 2026
Viewed by 245
Abstract
Aquatic environments that support tourism, including coasts, lakes, reservoirs, and estuaries, are experiencing accelerating eutrophication worldwide. This trend increases the frequency and intensity of algal blooms. These blooms undermine ecosystem services and weaken the socio-economic performance of destination areas. Despite these challenges, existing [...] Read more.
Aquatic environments that support tourism, including coasts, lakes, reservoirs, and estuaries, are experiencing accelerating eutrophication worldwide. This trend increases the frequency and intensity of algal blooms. These blooms undermine ecosystem services and weaken the socio-economic performance of destination areas. Despite these challenges, existing research remains fragmented. Aquatic sciences mainly examine nutrient enrichment and bloom dynamics. In contrast, tourism studies often treat blooms as episodic disturbances and rarely integrate exposure pathways, risk communication, or feedback to destination governance. This review synthesizes evidence across freshwater and marine systems to develop a coupled tourism–water ecosystem perspective. We link eutrophication drivers and bloom typologies to three dimensions. These are the degradation of tourism-supporting ecosystem services, compound health stressors, and communication filters. The first includes losses of water clarity and aesthetic value. The second involves multi-route exposure through contact, inhalation, and seafood ingestion. The third shapes perceived safety, trust, and behavioral adaptation. We further connect perceived health risks to observable tourist behaviors, including cancellation, destination substitution, and activity avoidance. These micro-level responses can aggregate into market-level demand contractions and consumption reallocation. They can also trigger regional economic cascades, including public management costs, employment impacts, and long-term reputational damage. Crucially, tourism is not merely a victim of blooms. It can also act as a reinforcing anthropogenic driver through wastewater burdens, infrastructure expansion, and pulse pressures. These pressures lower ecological resilience, especially under warming and hydrological stabilization. Finally, we identify governance leverage points. These include early-warning systems, threshold-based graded interventions, transparent risk communication, and integrated social–ecological modeling. These strategies can reduce uncertainty-driven losses and support adaptive destination management. Overall, this review reframes algal blooms as systemic social–ecological risks. It provides a structured basis for future empirical attribution and policy design in tourism-dependent waters under climate stress. Full article
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25 pages, 877 KB  
Perspective
Rethinking Immovable Cultural Heritage Within One Health: An Ecophysical Perspective
by Marco Casazza
Environments 2026, 13(6), 329; https://doi.org/10.3390/environments13060329 - 9 Jun 2026
Viewed by 394
Abstract
Immovable cultural heritage, including archaeological sites, historic buildings, and long-standing landscape structures, is typically interpreted through historical, aesthetic, and identity-based perspectives. This paper proposes an alternative reading, situating heritage within the broader context of coupled environmental, biological, and human systems. Grounded in non-equilibrium [...] Read more.
Immovable cultural heritage, including archaeological sites, historic buildings, and long-standing landscape structures, is typically interpreted through historical, aesthetic, and identity-based perspectives. This paper proposes an alternative reading, situating heritage within the broader context of coupled environmental, biological, and human systems. Grounded in non-equilibrium thermodynamics and system ecology, the study advances an ecophysical perspective in which heritage is understood as a persistent structural and informational component of the human niche. Drawing on evidence from building physics, landscape ecology, environmental psychology, and health-related research, this paper discusses the scientific plausibility of heritage-mediated effects, including environmental buffering, habitat stabilization, and cognitive and physiological regulation. These heterogeneous processes are reinterpreted within a unified conceptual framework, HEROS (HERitage One Health System), which links observable indicators to underlying mechanisms of organization and dissipation. A simplified stock–flow formulation, consistent with ecophysics and system ecology literature, is introduced to illustrate how heritage may influence dissipation across environmental, animal, and human subsystems. Rather than presenting a fully operational model, this perspective aims to reposition heritage within One Health and sustainability frameworks, highlighting its potential role in supporting system stability, resilience, and long-term continuity. Full article
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17 pages, 284 KB  
Article
The Epistemic Stratification of Ecological Thought: An Inquiry into the Models of Environmental Understanding
by Andrea Gentili
Philosophies 2026, 11(3), 92; https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies11030092 - 4 Jun 2026
Viewed by 284
Abstract
What do we mean when we talk about the “environment” inside the ecological discourse? Do we really have a clear and distinct notion of it? This paper argues that the “environment” is not a single object approached from different disciplinary angles, but a [...] Read more.
What do we mean when we talk about the “environment” inside the ecological discourse? Do we really have a clear and distinct notion of it? This paper argues that the “environment” is not a single object approached from different disciplinary angles, but a stratified epistemic field in which distinct models produce distinct results. Against the assumption of a unified environmental referent, the article reconstructs four major models of understanding: (1) the scientific model of the ecosystem, (2) the moral model of nature as value, (3) the aesthetic model of landscape, and (4) the juridical model of territory or land. Each of these models is shown to function as a specific device of objectivation, unifying heterogeneous elements according to its own rationality: systemic regulation, axiological orientation, experiential appearance, or the normative ordering of living space. Through historical and conceptual analyses, the paper demonstrates that these models are neither mutually reducible nor merely complementary perspectives on the same object. Rather, they generate different environmental objects, each governed by its own epistemic logic. What the paper suggests is that the environment remains (as it should) a polyvocal concept, and that a critical epistemology of the environment, precisely because of this polyvocality, must concern itself with mapping these models and explicating their architecture and techniques of functioning. Full article
24 pages, 1548 KB  
Article
Public Perceptions of Wildfire Risk in the UK: A Study of Roaches Nature Reserve in the Peak District
by Luigi Marfella, Helen C. Glanville, Francesco Niccoli, Robert L. Wilby and Darren Smith
Land 2026, 15(6), 944; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15060944 - 30 May 2026
Viewed by 584
Abstract
Wildfires are significant and increasing hazards in the United Kingdom (UK), affecting both ecosystem integrity and public safety, particularly within many rural–urban interface locations. In moorland environments, where recreational pressure is high, human negligence often remains a major ignition source. The Peak District [...] Read more.
Wildfires are significant and increasing hazards in the United Kingdom (UK), affecting both ecosystem integrity and public safety, particularly within many rural–urban interface locations. In moorland environments, where recreational pressure is high, human negligence often remains a major ignition source. The Peak District National Park in Central England is vulnerable to these hazards, as exemplified by the 2018 wildfire at The Roaches Nature Reserve, which was triggered by an out-of-control barbecue. Despite increasing wildfire risk due to climate change, public awareness and perceptions of wildfire impact in the UK are limited. This study used an online questionnaire survey to examine public understanding of wildfires among a non-specialist audience and how the ‘2018 Roaches wildfire’ influenced Reserve users’ perceptions of impacts, recovery, and management. Respondents demonstrated a general awareness of wildfire severity, ignition sources, and global fire geography, although familiarity with specific UK incidents varied. Perceptions of impacts were mixed, reflecting different experiences and emotional responses to the 2018 event. Ecological aspects, such as soil, biodiversity, and landscape aesthetics, were widely perceived as ‘slow to recover’, whereas recreation, safety, and health were viewed as returning to normal more quickly. A strong sense of shared responsibility for wildfire safety emerged, with participants emphasizing the need for clearer communication, improved public education, and higher levels of community involvement. These findings provide exploratory but valuable insights into public perceptions of UK wildfires, thereby informing future research pathways to strengthen fire management and preparedness. Full article
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25 pages, 7752 KB  
Article
Visual Arts: Future Perspectives and Contributions to Sustainability Within the Saudi Society
by Maria de la O. Fernandez Raposo
Arts 2026, 15(6), 112; https://doi.org/10.3390/arts15060112 - 26 May 2026
Viewed by 597
Abstract
The concept of awareness in the visual arts has become an ethical, professional, and social imperative. Adopting a sustainable approach to creative practice is no longer a trend but an established and necessary field of inquiry. Within this context, awareness has been expressed [...] Read more.
The concept of awareness in the visual arts has become an ethical, professional, and social imperative. Adopting a sustainable approach to creative practice is no longer a trend but an established and necessary field of inquiry. Within this context, awareness has been expressed not only through eco-branding and design campaigns but also through artworks and contemporary artistic practices that embody sustainable values both aesthetically and philosophically. Visual arts thus function as a reflective and critical tool, capable of reassessing past and present paradigms, encouraging more responsible uses of resources, promoting environmental sustainability, and shaping public attitudes through conscious and critical forms of expression. This study adopts a qualitative approach to examine transformations in contemporary art practices within the Saudi Arabian art scene. Selected artworks are analysed to explore historical and conceptual narratives shaping artistic production. The research is based on a bibliographic and documentary review that includes academic literature, exhibition catalogues and press sources related to the Saudi cultural context. Data are gathered through observing artworks and, where possible, through interviews with artists. A comparative analysis was developed, with the study framed by art practices, their concepts, and their ecological contributions, leading to a sustainable awareness and their potential role in encouraging social change. The comparative study among artists provides an innovative research framework and initiates a broader dialogue on sustainable creative practices rooted in Saudi cultural contexts. The findings highlight how visual arts contribute to ecological awareness and climate activism through art installations, recycled materials, and digital practices, reinforcing sustainability as a core value within contemporary Saudi society. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Visual Arts)
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6 pages, 154 KB  
Proceeding Paper
The Transformative Power of Web Comics: Innovative Teaching and Reducing the Cognitive Load
by Cristiana D’Aprile
Proceedings 2026, 139(1), 24; https://doi.org/10.3390/proceedings2026139024 - 26 May 2026
Viewed by 331
Abstract
In the epistemological constellation of contemporary visual education, web comics establish themselves as semiotic devices with a dual pedagogical value. On the one hand, they represent the advanced synthesis of multimodal codes (visual, textual, sound); on the other, they structure participatory learning environments [...] Read more.
In the epistemological constellation of contemporary visual education, web comics establish themselves as semiotic devices with a dual pedagogical value. On the one hand, they represent the advanced synthesis of multimodal codes (visual, textual, sound); on the other, they structure participatory learning environments typical of digital culture. This contribution starts from the theoretical premise that digital comic narratives, in their hypertextual and algorithmic essence, constitute true liminal spaces where ontological meanings are negotiated and transformative visual literacy skills are developed. The research, conducted according to the methodological paradigm of design-based research and rooted in the framework of multimodal social semiotics, demonstrates how sequential narrative structure and visual metaphors reduce cognitive load, through scaffolding. The interactive mechanisms typical of the medium (comments, sharing, remixes) promote an aesthetic of participation, transforming students from passive users to producers of knowledge, according to the principles of connected learning. The analysis focuses on: Panda Likes Bevilacqua, Totally Unnecessary Comics by Leone; Rossoni’s Rouge Worms, Lele Corvi’s strips, Natangelo’s cartoons. The limitations of the study lie in the limited sample and its preliminary nature, as it analyses the device itself without evaluating its implications in the classroom or the professional skills (TPACK) necessary for teachers. Large-scale teaching feasibility remains to be investigated in future applied experiments, which involve the direct involvement of classes and teachers. From a pedagogical perspective, web comics are effective teaching tools for students with ASD. Their community-based nature requires a recalibration of traditional pedagogical frameworks towards more ecological approaches. Full article
19 pages, 38018 KB  
Article
Echoes of Decay: Rome’s Unconscious Coexistence with Spontaneous Urban Nature
by Flavio Martella and Maria Vittoria Tesei
Land 2026, 15(5), 778; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15050778 - 4 May 2026
Viewed by 360
Abstract
The accelerating pace of global urbanisation is reshaping planning agendas toward integrating urban nature, yet dominant approaches continue to rely on designed or controlled interventions to produce engineered approximations of spontaneity. This study presents Rome as a striking example of spontaneous urban nature, [...] Read more.
The accelerating pace of global urbanisation is reshaping planning agendas toward integrating urban nature, yet dominant approaches continue to rely on designed or controlled interventions to produce engineered approximations of spontaneity. This study presents Rome as a striking example of spontaneous urban nature, where wild flora has reclaimed ruins, walls, and neglected spaces for centuries without planned intervention. By “wild” or spontaneous vegetation, this paper refers to unmanaged, self-seeding flora that establishes itself without deliberate planting, irrigation, or maintenance, colonising ruins, walls, abandoned lots, and urban margins through autonomous ecological processes. The paper adopts a critical narrative synthesis methodology, integrating historical–cultural evidence, contemporary ecological data drawn from peer-reviewed biodiversity surveys within Rome’s urban boundary, and a spatial analysis of georeferenced historical cartographic sources to build an interpretive framework for what is here called passive coexistence. The key findings demonstrate that Rome’s sub-Mediterranean climate and centuries of aesthetic conditioning through visual arts, literature, and film have together produced a tacit social acceptance of spontaneous vegetation, effectively substituting for the deliberate education campaigns and designed interventions required in comparable cities. The study proposes an alternative narrative of spontaneous urban nature, guided by ecological monitoring and grounded in heritage planning frameworks. Despite context-specific limits, Rome’s passive coexistence paradigm offers a provocation and existing proof for more-than-human cities that seek resilience without the resource burden of engineered green infrastructure. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Historic Urban Landscape and Planning)
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14 pages, 1231 KB  
Article
Seed Germination of Native Mediterranean Species for Establishing Self-Sustaining Urban Meadows Supporting Urban Biodiversity
by Georgios Varsamis, Eleftherios Karapatzak, Anna Vasiou and Theodora Merou
Seeds 2026, 5(3), 27; https://doi.org/10.3390/seeds5030027 - 4 May 2026
Viewed by 597
Abstract
Urbanization reduces biodiversity and affects plant–insect interactions, creating a need for more functional green spaces. Urban meadows with native species are a promising option, but their use is still limited due to a variety of reasons concerning the utilization framework of suitable plant [...] Read more.
Urbanization reduces biodiversity and affects plant–insect interactions, creating a need for more functional green spaces. Urban meadows with native species are a promising option, but their use is still limited due to a variety of reasons concerning the utilization framework of suitable plant species. The present study aimed to develop seed germination protocols for 26 native Mediterranean herbaceous species originating from northeastern Greece selected to support the establishment of species-rich and self-sustaining urban meadows. To the above end, seed germination experiments were conducted ex situ under controlled environment conditions using seeds collected from the wild for each species. Seed viability was assessed using the tetrazolium (TTZ) test to determine the maximum germination potential in each case. Freshly collected seeds were stored under ambient conditions for approximately 3 months (after-ripening) prior to germination testing, which was followed by cold stratification as a pretreatment for dormancy release. The results showed high embryo viability in all species and indicated that most taxa exhibited either no dormancy or relatively shallow physiological dormancy. Germination tests revealed that 14 of the 26 species presented high germination percentages in the control treatment, which suggests that after-ripening contributed to dormancy release in a significant portion of the seed lot. However, it remains unclear whether freshly collected seeds require an initial after-ripening period before responding to cold stratification. Furthermore, cold stratification significantly enhanced germination in 12 species confirming its effectiveness as a simple and practical method for dormancy release. In addition to the seed germination results, the selected species present a wide range of functional and esthetic characteristics, including variation in plant height, flowering phenology and flower and leaf color. These traits are important for both ecological performance and visual quality in urban environments. The combination of extended flowering periods and color diversity suggests the potential for continuous floral resource availability, which can support diverse pollinator communities and, indirectly, urban fauna such as insectivorous birds. The results indicate that the studied species are suitable for biodiversity-oriented urban plantings. Their relatively shallow dormancy and ease of propagation, coupled with their functional and aesthetic traits, support their use in the development of resilient and self-sustaining urban meadows. Full article
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9 pages, 153 KB  
Article
Uncentering the Eye: Phenomenological Visions in the Poetry of Abū Nuwās
by Forrest Gander
Culture 2026, 2(2), 9; https://doi.org/10.3390/culture2020009 - 28 Apr 2026
Viewed by 351
Abstract
While Abū Nuwās is most often celebrated for his irreverent exaltation of wine and homoerotic desire, his hunting poems (tardiyyāt) reveal a lyrical mode of interspecies perception and affective entanglement. Drawing on thinkers such as Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Donna Haraway, and Giorgio [...] Read more.
While Abū Nuwās is most often celebrated for his irreverent exaltation of wine and homoerotic desire, his hunting poems (tardiyyāt) reveal a lyrical mode of interspecies perception and affective entanglement. Drawing on thinkers such as Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Donna Haraway, and Giorgio Agamben, I consider how Abū Nuwās develops an ecological and relational poetics that decenters human centrality and enacts a shared field of perception. The poet’s work offers a proto-phenomenological account of embodiment, relational ethics, and aesthetic attention that anticipates contemporary philosophical concerns with nonhuman agency, multi-species intersubjectivity, and an ethics of perception. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Philosophical Contexts for Reading Poetry)
10 pages, 2527 KB  
Article
First Report of Kalmusia variispora Causing Bark Necrosis and Branch Dieback of Horse Chestnut (Aesculus hippocastanum L.)
by Miłosz Tkaczyk and Katarzyna Sikora
Pathogens 2026, 15(4), 445; https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens15040445 - 20 Apr 2026
Viewed by 448
Abstract
Horse chestnut (Aesculus hippocastanum L.) is a widely planted ornamental and urban tree valued for its aesthetic and ecological functions. In recent years, declining health of horse chestnut in urban environments has been increasingly reported, often associated with a complex of biotic [...] Read more.
Horse chestnut (Aesculus hippocastanum L.) is a widely planted ornamental and urban tree valued for its aesthetic and ecological functions. In recent years, declining health of horse chestnut in urban environments has been increasingly reported, often associated with a complex of biotic and abiotic stressors. During a health survey of A. hippocastanum trees growing along an urban road corridor in Warsaw, Poland, extensive bark necrosis and branch dieback were observed. The aim of this study was to identify the causal agent of these symptoms using morphological, cultural, molecular (ITS rDNA), and pathogenicity tests under controlled conditions. Fungal isolates were obtained from necrotic tissues and were consistently identified as Kalmusia variispora based on ITS sequence analysis (99.0–99.6% similarity to GenBank references) and characteristic morphology. Pathogenicity tests fulfilled Koch’s postulates, reproducing necrotic lesions and cambial damage similar to those observed in the field. To our knowledge, this is the first documented report worldwide of K. variispora infecting A. hippocastanum. The findings expand the known host range of this opportunistic Didymosphaeriaceae species and highlight its potential role in bark and wood disease complexes of urban trees. Further research is needed to assess its distribution, genetic diversity, and epidemiological significance in urban forest ecosystems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Fungal Pathogens)
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24 pages, 386 KB  
Article
Curating Awareness and Hope: Performing Field and Finzi as Gentle Climate Activism
by Mine Doğantan-Dack
Arts 2026, 15(4), 84; https://doi.org/10.3390/arts15040084 - 17 Apr 2026
Viewed by 1197
Abstract
This article presents an autoethnographic narrative account of curating and performing two pieces for solo piano and string orchestra—Climate Concerto by Brian Field and Eclogue by Gerald Finzi—to advocate for climate action. It discusses the selection of a concert venue that could [...] Read more.
This article presents an autoethnographic narrative account of curating and performing two pieces for solo piano and string orchestra—Climate Concerto by Brian Field and Eclogue by Gerald Finzi—to advocate for climate action. It discusses the selection of a concert venue that could be “thickly lived”, offering layers of cultural, historical and aesthetic resonance, and a concert date that could generate “interaction chains”, where engagement in one event motivates engagement in others. The article reflects on the multiple forms of loss brought about by the climate emergency, exploring Field’s musical portrayal of environmental loss and Finzi’s evocation of a harmonious human-nature relationship, which highlights a way of being-in-the-world that has been lost. In response to pervasive pessimism and dystopian narratives in climate communication, the discussion foregrounds hope as a powerful motivator for positive action, showing how the narrative scope of Field’s large-scale forms and the aesthetic beauty of Finzi’s music can elicit felt hope. The article also advocates for gentle musical activism for climate action, emphasising music’s capacity to cultivate relational sensitivity, ethical responsiveness, and collective responsibility toward each other and the world—even amid ecological crisis, social fragmentation, and uncertainty. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Creating Musical Experiences)
26 pages, 2918 KB  
Article
Cultural Ecosystem Services in the Longji Terraced Fields, China: Spatial Patterns and Supply–Demand Mismatches
by Yichun Wei, Jinli Wu, Wei Xiong and You Zhou
Land 2026, 15(4), 653; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15040653 - 16 Apr 2026
Viewed by 531
Abstract
Under the combined pressures of urbanization and tourism development, terraced agricultural heritage sites are increasingly threatened by the degradation of traditional landscapes, the weakening of living cultural practices, and mismatches between the supply and demand of cultural ecosystem services (CESs). As a representative [...] Read more.
Under the combined pressures of urbanization and tourism development, terraced agricultural heritage sites are increasingly threatened by the degradation of traditional landscapes, the weakening of living cultural practices, and mismatches between the supply and demand of cultural ecosystem services (CESs). As a representative type of Globally Important Agricultural Heritage Systems (GIAHSs), the rice terrace landscapes of southern China have formed an integrated system of forests, villages, terraces, and water networks, embodying multiple values related to production, ecology, landscape, and culture. To support the coordination of heritage conservation, tourism development, and the transformation of cultural value, this study takes the core area of the Longji Terraced Fields as a case study and develops an improved SolVES–IPA collaborative assessment framework from the perspective of tourist perception. Four CES categories are examined: recreational value, aesthetic value, historical and cultural value, and educational value. The results show that (1) the four CES categories exhibit significant spatial differentiation. Recreational and aesthetic values are mainly concentrated in high-altitude viewing spaces, whereas historical, cultural, and educational values depend more heavily on traditional architectural spaces and interpretive nodes. (2) Clear supply–demand mismatches exist across CES categories. Recreational value is constrained by limited activity diversity; aesthetic value is limited by inadequate architectural harmony; historical and cultural value is primarily restricted by insufficient continuity of living traditions; and educational value is constrained by incomplete interpretive content and single presentation formats. (3) CES optimization in the Longji Terraced Fields should adopt both type-specific and hierarchical intervention strategies, including priority optimization for high-value units with critical shortcomings, near-term improvement for high-value units with general shortcomings, functional enhancement for medium-value units with critical shortcomings, progressive optimization for medium-value units with general shortcomings, and potential cultivation of low-value units. Based on these findings, this study proposes several optimization directions, including strengthening participatory experiences, promoting the coordinated renewal of the architectural landscape, creating multisensory cultural display spaces, and establishing a multidimensional interpretation network. The improved SolVES–IPA collaborative assessment framework developed in this study integrates CES spatial identification, supply–demand diagnosis, and optimization priority setting, providing a methodological reference and practical support for enhancing cultural services and promoting the coordinated development of heritage conservation and cultural tourism in the Longji Terraced Fields and similar agricultural heritage sites. Full article
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18 pages, 5218 KB  
Article
Multivariate Evaluation of Medicinal and Aromatic Plant Diversity for Sustainable Campus Landscape Planning in Iğdır, Türkiye
by Rıdvan Tik and Tuncay Kaya
Sustainability 2026, 18(8), 3772; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18083772 - 10 Apr 2026
Viewed by 425
Abstract
Due to their aesthetic qualities and versatile applications, medicinal and aromatic plants are an important component of landscape systems. The diversity of color, shape, and texture observed in the vegetative and reproductive organs of these plants contributes to visual composition, while their medicinal [...] Read more.
Due to their aesthetic qualities and versatile applications, medicinal and aromatic plants are an important component of landscape systems. The diversity of color, shape, and texture observed in the vegetative and reproductive organs of these plants contributes to visual composition, while their medicinal and aromatic properties enhance their ecological and socio-cultural significance. However, many taxa are underrepresented in landscape planning applications. This study examined the diversity of medicinal and aromatic plant taxa identified at the Iğdır University Şehit Bülent Yurtseven Campus in Iğdır Province, Turkey, using a descriptive approach. Plant taxa were evaluated based on their families, life forms, leaf characteristics, flowering periods, and medicinal and aromatic properties. Multivariate analyses were conducted to examine phenological similarities among the taxa. A total of 98 plant taxa were identified; 66 taxa possess only medicinal properties, one taxon possesses only aromatic properties, and 31 taxa possess both. These findings reveal that the campus is home to a wide variety of medicinal and aromatic plant taxa, with characteristics relevant to planting layout and species selection. Consequently, this study provides a descriptive foundation for further research on how such taxa can be incorporated into campus planting designs and green space planning. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Social Ecology and Sustainability)
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24 pages, 5819 KB  
Review
Weed Flora Evolution in the Era of Climate Change: New Agronomic Issues as a Threat to Sustainable Agriculture
by Stefano Benvenuti and Guido Baldoni
Agronomy 2026, 16(7), 764; https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy16070764 - 5 Apr 2026
Viewed by 725
Abstract
The impacts of climate change on Mediterranean weed flora were investigated to inform future weed management strategies. Projections indicate that rising temperatures and increased atmospheric CO2 concentrations are likely to favor ruderal species characterized by rapid phenological development and high dispersal capacity. [...] Read more.
The impacts of climate change on Mediterranean weed flora were investigated to inform future weed management strategies. Projections indicate that rising temperatures and increased atmospheric CO2 concentrations are likely to favor ruderal species characterized by rapid phenological development and high dispersal capacity. Enhanced abiotic stressors—such as elevated temperatures, water scarcity, and increased UV-B radiation—are expected to affect crops more severely than weeds, given the latter’s greater evolutionary potential to develop stress-tolerant biotypes. Moreover, the increased frequency and intensity of extreme events (e.g., drought, flooding, and soil salinization) may reduce weed community diversity, potentially leading to dominance by a limited number of highly competitive species and consequently intensifying reliance on chemical weed control. Simplification of weed communities may also increase vulnerability to the introduction and establishment of alien species, particularly those originating from hot and arid regions, some of which may be parasitic, toxic, or allergenic. Climate change-induced phenological mismatches between flowering plants and pollinators are likely to favor wind-pollinated weed species, further compromising the aesthetic and ecological quality of agricultural landscapes. Additionally, increased production of wind-dispersed allergenic pollen, together with the anticipated rise in herbicide applications, may pose significant risks to human health. An effective agronomic strategy to address future weed scenarios should include the genetic improvement in crops to enhance adaptive plasticity, exploiting germplasm from ancestral lines and related wild species. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Weed Science and Weed Management)
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