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25 pages, 33051 KB  
Article
Heritage Revitalization in Historic Districts Empowered by Cultural Capital: A Case Study of the Western Han Archaeological Site Historic District in Hanzhong, China
by Zhen Li and Ling Qin
Buildings 2026, 16(13), 2503; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16132503 (registering DOI) - 24 Jun 2026
Abstract
Urban historic districts often present archaeological sites and historic buildings in a fragmented way, posing significant challenges for public understanding and enhancing heritage value. Solely physical conservation fails to fully communicate their cultural significance, while excessive commercialization often results in the erosion of [...] Read more.
Urban historic districts often present archaeological sites and historic buildings in a fragmented way, posing significant challenges for public understanding and enhancing heritage value. Solely physical conservation fails to fully communicate their cultural significance, while excessive commercialization often results in the erosion of cultural authenticity and the displacement of local communities. Drawing from cultural capital theory in sociology and cultural economics, this study redefines historical districts as sustainable urban cultural capital, comprising habituated, objectified, and institutionalized components. A Value Chain Model of Cultural Capital (VCMCC) is developed, consisting of three stages: cultural resource excavation, cultural asset cultivation, and cultural capital management. This model aims to empower heritage adaptive reuse and foster synergy between cultural heritage and economic development. Utilizing an embedded single-case design with longitudinal ethnography, the research focuses on the Western Han Archaeological Sites Historical District (WHAS HD) in Hanzhong, China. It involves multiple rounds of mixed-data collection from 2023 to 2025, on which design-based research is performed. This study operationalizes VCMCC through a series of spatially and socially grounded strategies. In the cultural resource excavation stage, superior resources are identified through a systematic review of historical archives, archaeological reports, and local gazetteers, along with surveys of architectural remains and spatial mapping. In the cultural asset cultivation stage, these resources are transformed into experiential and communicable cultural assets via a “one courtyard, one strategy” approach for activating courtyard functions, developing dual-theme heritage routes, and deploying digital interpretation tools. In the cultural capital management stage, a multi-stakeholder community committee is established, and binding institutional safeguards are integrated to ensure sustainable heritage adaptive reuse. Concurrently, a baseline indicator system covering three dimensions, cultural, social, and economic benefits, is developed to provide benchmarks for future post-intervention benefit evaluation and verification. The proposed and implemented VCMCC model translates cultural capital theory from an abstract explanatory framework into an actionable pathway for heritage adaptive reuse, offering theoretical and methodological guidance for the adaptive reuse of similar small and medium-sized historic districts. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Revitalizing Buildings and Our Urban Heritage)
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29 pages, 2668 KB  
Article
A Two-Stage Functional Framework for Decoding Climate Stress Trajectories in Corn Yields
by Xingzuo He and Yubo Luo
Sustainability 2026, 18(13), 6428; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18136428 (registering DOI) - 24 Jun 2026
Abstract
As extreme weather events increasingly threaten global food systems, accurately assessing climate risks and predicting regional crop yields remains a critical challenge. Conventional prediction models often rely on direct weather-to-yield relationships, bypassing continuous crop physiological responses and limiting their capacity to capture fine-grained [...] Read more.
As extreme weather events increasingly threaten global food systems, accurately assessing climate risks and predicting regional crop yields remains a critical challenge. Conventional prediction models often rely on direct weather-to-yield relationships, bypassing continuous crop physiological responses and limiting their capacity to capture fine-grained temporal impacts of meteorological anomalies. To address this, we propose a novel two-stage spatiotemporal functional framework that integrates high-resolution daily weather trajectories with satellite-derived indicators, utilizing the Enhanced Vegetation Index (EVI) and Land Surface Water Index (LSWI) to represent canopy structural vigor and hydraulic status, respectively. In the first stage, a Historical Functional Linear Model (HFLM) dynamically maps daily meteorological trajectories (temperature, precipitation, and solar radiation) onto continuous physiological curves under strict temporal causality constraints. This generates bivariate coefficient surfaces that reveal dynamic windows of vulnerability and capture divergent, lagged physiological responses to climate stress. In the second stage, a spatially heterogeneous functional additive model integrates these weather-shaped physiological trajectories alongside raw meteorological dynamics as joint predictors for county-level yields. By extracting functional principal components and modeling flexible non-linear biological responses while accounting for continuous spatial heterogeneity, this dual-channel frameworkcaptures key aspects of both chronic physiological stress and acute meteorological shocks. Validated across a 25-year (2000–2024) U.S. Corn Belt panel, the proposed DC-FAM achieves a mean weighted mean squared prediction error (WMSPE) of 242.33 (bu/acre)2 and a median out-of-sample Rcv2 of 0.422, outperforming all benchmarks including a random forest. Attribution of the 2012 flash drought further demonstrates the framework’s capacity to mechanistically trace the complete disaster propagation chain from anomalous spring warming to mid-summer hydraulic failure. The proposed framework provides a transparent, biophysically grounded tool for decoding dynamic climate stress trajectories and disaster propagation chains, offering potential implications for adaptive farm management and precision agricultural insurance. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sustainable Agriculture)
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22 pages, 1858 KB  
Article
Enhancing Work-Readiness Through Scaffolding and Cognitive Transfer in CAD Education: A Twelve-Year Reflective Case Study
by Jinhe Liu, Yongmin Zhong and Chengfan Gu
Educ. Sci. 2026, 16(7), 992; https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci16070992 (registering DOI) - 23 Jun 2026
Abstract
Engineering computer graphics education frequently exhibits a gap between procedural CAD software (e.g. CATIA 2022) training and the strategic engineering reasoning required by industrial practice. This paper documents a holistic redesign of two advanced CAD courses. The study is framed within the Scholarship [...] Read more.
Engineering computer graphics education frequently exhibits a gap between procedural CAD software (e.g. CATIA 2022) training and the strategic engineering reasoning required by industrial practice. This paper documents a holistic redesign of two advanced CAD courses. The study is framed within the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (SoTL) tradition as a practitioner-led reflective case study. The redesign integrates four pedagogical mechanisms within an enterprise-CAD context: authentic problem-based learning, dual-layered asynchronous video scaffolding, software-agnostic heuristics (including pre-modelling cognitive mapping), and cognitive apprenticeship. The analysis triangulates three institutional data sources: quantitative Course Experience Survey indicators, qualitative student response themes, and twelve consecutive years of cohort-level academic performance records (2013–2024). The 2022 intervention iteration coincided with a marked elevation in academic performance. Grades reached approximately two standard deviations above the historical baseline. Concurrently, qualitative themes highlighted perceived industrial relevance and platform-portable confidence. However, performance in the post-intervention iterations (2023 and 2024) partially regressed. While scores remained above the historical mean, they did not sustain the 2022 peak. This pattern indicates partial sustainment, rather than evidence of a stable or definitive sustained pedagogical effect. This case is reported as descriptive rather than inferential. While the observed patterns align strongly with theoretical predictions, they do not establish definitive causal effects. Ultimately, the primary contribution of this study lies in documenting the integrated operationalization of these four mechanisms. Furthermore, it highlights longitudinal pedagogical sustainability as a critical, under-examined dimension that single-iteration evidence systematically obscures. Full article
23 pages, 19944 KB  
Article
Linguistic Landscape as Cultural Heritage: Reflection of the Multilingual History and Spatial Identity of Istria, Croatia—Late 19th–21st Century
by Mihela Melem Hajdarović and Borna Fuerst-Bjeliš
Heritage 2026, 9(7), 247; https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage9070247 (registering DOI) - 23 Jun 2026
Abstract
The linguistic landscape is a significant aspect of the cultural landscape and heritage. Istria, a region and peninsula located in the Republic of Croatia, has experienced various influences over the years that have shaped language use, impacting the linguistic landscape and the identity [...] Read more.
The linguistic landscape is a significant aspect of the cultural landscape and heritage. Istria, a region and peninsula located in the Republic of Croatia, has experienced various influences over the years that have shaped language use, impacting the linguistic landscape and the identity of the local population. This paper aims to investigate how the linguistic and spatial identity of the people in Istria has been represented in the region’s cultural landscape during two comparative periods: the turn of the 20th century (the local population’s fight for their national language against the languages imposed by the European powers that governed this region—Italy and Austria) and the turn of the 21st century (the status of minorities in the present Croatian region of Istria). This diachronic research employs a cross-sectional method to compare findings and establish cause-and-effect relationships. This study involves analyzing linguistic data from historical postcards, conducting field studies, and using the pin placement feature on Google Maps to assess recent periods. This research identified Italian and Croatian as the dominant languages during different periods, with English being increasingly prevalent in contemporary times. The results demonstrated that the spatial identity of the Italian minority community is strongly reflected in the linguistic landscape, primarily due to bilateral interstate agreements. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Cultural Heritage)
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20 pages, 888 KB  
Article
Preserved Aesthetic Judgements in Parkinson’s Disease: A Case–Control Study Suggests Limited Need for Content Adaptation for Receptive Arts Engagement
by Blanca T. M. Spee, Domicele Jonauskaite, Bastiaan R. Bloem, Emmy van den Berg, Nina Verhoeven, Dagne Bagdonaviciute, Nicolien Dam, Julia S. Crone, Jorik Nonnekes, David Steyrl and Matthew Pelowski
J. Clin. Med. 2026, 15(13), 4865; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm15134865 (registering DOI) - 23 Jun 2026
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Parkinson’s disease (PD) is increasingly recognized as a multisystem disorder affecting perceptual, emotional, and reward-related processes. While arts-based interventions in PD have primarily focused on active creative arts engagement, it remains unclear whether receptive arts engagement with visual art—how artworks are perceived [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Parkinson’s disease (PD) is increasingly recognized as a multisystem disorder affecting perceptual, emotional, and reward-related processes. While arts-based interventions in PD have primarily focused on active creative arts engagement, it remains unclear whether receptive arts engagement with visual art—how artworks are perceived and evaluated—is altered. Our objective is to determine whether aesthetic evaluation of visual artworks differs in individuals with PD compared to age-matched healthy controls. We further examine whether emotional interpretation, color-emotion associations, and experiential responses to art viewing are altered. Methods: In a cross-sectional case–control study, individuals with PD (n = 87) and age-matched healthy controls (n = 49) completed two online assessments. Participants evaluated 36 artworks from the Vienna Art Picture System in terms of liking, beauty, and subjective art attributes. Objective image-derived features were computed for each artwork. Interpretable machine learning models were used to test whether evaluation patterns predicted diagnostic group and to identify determinants of aesthetic judgments. Participants further completed a color-emotion association task using ambiguous expressive portraits and reported perceived changes in cognitive, emotional, motivational, and physical states following art viewing. Results: Aesthetic evaluation patterns did not support reliable classification of PD status, indicating no systematic group differences in liking, beauty, or attribute-based judgments between PD and controls. Instead, aesthetic judgments were robustly predicted by individual differences and objective artwork properties, including art-historical style, symmetry, complexity, and color-related features, whereas diagnostic group, gender, and age did not contribute to predictions. Emotional interpretation and color-emotion associations were largely comparable between groups, with a single specific deviation in color-emotion mapping. Positive emotions were less frequently associated with pink in people with PD. Self-reported experiential responses to art viewing did not differ significantly between groups. Conclusions: Aesthetic evaluation of visual artworks appears largely preserved in people with PD. These findings suggest that, in digital viewing contexts, substantial adaptation of visual content to make it accessible for people with PD may not be necessary, although subtle perceptual and emotional differences may still be relevant. Efforts may instead be better directed toward addressing practical barriers to visual art engagement. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Parkinson's Disease: Recent Advances in Diagnosis and Treatment)
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36 pages, 81756 KB  
Article
Assessing Urban Chromatic Contagion: A Quantitative Index and an Epidemiological Approach to Prevent Visually Disruptive Facade Interventions
by Maialen Sagarna, María Senderos-Laka, Juan Pedro Otaduy-Zubizarreta, Ana Azpiri-Albístegui, Fernando Mora-Martín, José Javier Pérez-Martínez and Mireia Roca-Zeberio
Urban Sci. 2026, 10(7), 340; https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci10070340 (registering DOI) - 23 Jun 2026
Abstract
Façades play a decisive role in shaping the visual and symbolic character of historic urban environments. Recent European funding schemes promoting energy-efficient retrofitting have accelerated interventions on building envelopes. Although aligned with decarbonization objectives, these processes are generating significant chromatic and material transformations [...] Read more.
Façades play a decisive role in shaping the visual and symbolic character of historic urban environments. Recent European funding schemes promoting energy-efficient retrofitting have accelerated interventions on building envelopes. Although aligned with decarbonization objectives, these processes are generating significant chromatic and material transformations that risk eroding the visual coherence and cultural sustainability of consolidated urban areas. In the historic Ensanches of San Sebastián, the replacement of traditional envelope systems with new cladding solutions is leading to the loss of the architectural style of some facades and altering their materials, textures, and colors. A progressive “contagion effect” has been identified, whereby dissonant chromatic schemes—often associated with the proliferation of so-called “zebra blocks”, residential buildings with façades clad in alternating black and white stripes that have proliferated in recent urban developments—are replicated across adjacent buildings, gradually weakening spatial continuity and the genius loci of the neighborhood. In response to this phenomenon, this research develops a systematic methodology to analyze, quantify, and anticipate chromatic transformation in consolidated urban fabrics. The study combines historical morphological analysis, classification of architectural periods, and chromatic mapping of recent façade interventions. Based on this framework, a CARI, Chromatic Alteration Risk Index is proposed to evaluate the potential impact of façade alterations on urban chromatic coherence. Drawing on an epidemiological framework, the methodology enables the identification of critical transformation clusters, the assessment of contagion dynamics, and the definition of regulatory thresholds for color and material interventions. By integrating perceptual criteria, urban morphology, and spatial distribution patterns, the study moves beyond descriptive diagnosis and offers a transferable tool for municipal planning. The proposed approach supports the proactive regulation of façade rehabilitation processes, balancing energy efficiency objectives with the preservation of collective memory, material identity, and urban sensory quality. This study proposes a quantitative model of “urban chromatic contagion” to assess how façade color interventions propagate within a neighborhood. We define the Chromatic Integration Percentage (CIP) and the Chromatic Alteration Risk Index (CARI) of the analyzed area. Results indicate that poorly regulated façades show higher chromatic dissonance (low CIP) and act as contagion hotspots, while a clear risk gradient emerges: highly protected buildings present lower risk, whereas mixed typologies and recent rehabilitations concentrate higher CARI values. The model supports preventive urban color management by identifying areas at risk before visible alteration. Full article
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35 pages, 15939 KB  
Article
Flood Susceptibility Assessment in Two Eastern Mediterranean Catchments Using a Multi-Indicator Approach
by Despina Giannadaki, Antonis Bezes, Vassiliki Kotroni, Kostas Lagouvardos, Katerina Papagiannaki, Christina Oikonomou and Haris Haralambous
Hydrology 2026, 13(6), 163; https://doi.org/10.3390/hydrology13060163 (registering DOI) - 22 Jun 2026
Viewed by 71
Abstract
Flooding triggered by intense precipitation is a significant natural hazard affecting Mediterranean regions, where complex terrain, rapid hydrological response and increasing urbanization can amplify flood impacts. This study assesses flood susceptibility in two representative Mediterranean River catchments: the Koiliaris in Crete, Greece, and [...] Read more.
Flooding triggered by intense precipitation is a significant natural hazard affecting Mediterranean regions, where complex terrain, rapid hydrological response and increasing urbanization can amplify flood impacts. This study assesses flood susceptibility in two representative Mediterranean River catchments: the Koiliaris in Crete, Greece, and the Pediaios in Cyprus. A compact Flood Hazard Index (FHI) was developed by integrating the Topographic Wetness Index (TWI), Curve Number (CN), and R20 heavy rain frequency index, representing the principal geomorphological, hydrological and climatological controls of flood generation. Spatial datasets including EU-DEM elevation data, CORINE land cover, European soil databases, and Copernicus CERRA precipitation reanalysis were combined within a GIS-based multi-criteria framework using Analytic Hierarchy Process weighting. The resulting FHI maps identify high flood susceptibility along river corridors, low-lying accumulation zones, and urbanized areas. In the Koiliaris basin, 34% of the area fell within the high and very high susceptibility classes, mainly in downstream alluvial zones, whereas in the Pediaios basin, 29% of the area fell within the high and very high susceptibility classes, concentrated around the urbanized Nicosia corridor. The analysis of historical flood events provided a qualitative consistency assessment of the FHI patterns, acknowledging that the absence of spatially explicit flood-inundation footprints limits quantitative validation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Urban Flood Modeling, Forecasting and Early Warning)
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14 pages, 1041 KB  
Article
Amplicon-Based Multiregion Genomic Characterization of HIV-1 in a Tertiary-Care Hospital in Mexico: Antiretroviral Resistance Mutations and Subtype Diversity
by Eduardo García-Moncada, Enoc Mariano Cortés-Malagón, Jesús Alejandro Pineda-Migranas, Montserrat Ruiz Santana, Iliana Alejandra Cortés-Ortíz, José Francisco Escutia Domínguez, Daniel Agustín Bravata-Alcántara, Gustavo Acosta-Altamirano, Saúl David Razo-González, Manuel Alberto Castillo Mendez, Mónica Sierra-Martínez and Juan Carlos Bravata-Alcántara
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2026, 27(12), 5571; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms27125571 (registering DOI) - 20 Jun 2026
Viewed by 148
Abstract
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 exhibits extensive genetic diversity, which has important implications for molecular epidemiology, recombinant-pattern assessment, and antiretroviral resistance surveillance. In Mexico, HIV-1 molecular surveillance has historically relied mainly on partial pol gene sequencing, limiting the ability to compare lineage assignments [...] Read more.
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 exhibits extensive genetic diversity, which has important implications for molecular epidemiology, recombinant-pattern assessment, and antiretroviral resistance surveillance. In Mexico, HIV-1 molecular surveillance has historically relied mainly on partial pol gene sequencing, limiting the ability to compare lineage assignments across gag, pol, and env regions. We analyzed plasma samples from 40 treatment-naïve adults receiving care at a tertiary-care hospital in Mexico using a commercial amplicon-based multiregion HIV-1 genomic sequencing workflow. DeepChek® was used as the primary workflow for read processing, mutation calling, region-level subtype assignment, and antiretroviral resistance interpretation. Resistance interpretation was restricted to antiretroviral target regions with sufficient coverage, mainly reverse transcriptase, protease, integrase, and capsid, when available. Drug resistance mutations were identified in 6/40 participants (15.0%) when mutation-level resistance findings in RT, PR, and IN were considered; one additional sample showed a capsid inhibitor-nonsusceptible NGS call. NNRTI-associated findings were identified in 2/40 patients (5.0%), whereas NRTI- and PI-associated findings were identified in 1/40 patients (2.5%). Accessory or secondary INSTI-associated substitutions were detected in 2/40 patients (5.0%). Region-level subtype analysis revealed frequent discordant assignments across amplified segments, which is consistent with complex mosaic profiles; however, these findings are interpreted as region-level subtypes and recombinant-pattern assignments rather than continuous whole-genome recombination maps. One sample had insufficient RT/PROT/INT coverage for drug resistance interpretation in the complete DeepChek report and was retained only for regions meeting quality thresholds. These findings support the value of multiregion HIV-1 sequencing for local molecular surveillance while emphasizing the need for transparent region-level coverage reporting, cautious interpretation of recombinant-pattern calls, and transparent repository reporting. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Genomics of Human Disease)
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20 pages, 311 KB  
Article
From Athens to Jerusalem: Platonism, Richard Owen, and the Road Not Taken in Biology
by Michael A. Flannery
Religions 2026, 17(6), 734; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17060734 (registering DOI) - 19 Jun 2026
Viewed by 319
Abstract
Tertullian provocatively asked (circa 200 AD), “What indeed has Athens to do with Jerusalem? What concord is there between the Academy and the Church?” The relationship between formal philosophy and religion has been a contentious battleground ever since. It has historically come into [...] Read more.
Tertullian provocatively asked (circa 200 AD), “What indeed has Athens to do with Jerusalem? What concord is there between the Academy and the Church?” The relationship between formal philosophy and religion has been a contentious battleground ever since. It has historically come into sharpest focus in biology generally, and evolutionary theory specifically. Charles Darwin clearly won the day in the short-term. His evolutionary functionalism looked like an inglorious abandonment of time-honored metaphysical realism for positivist empirical reductionism with a concomitant horizontalization of perspective that has secularized and flattened the intellectual landscape. But more recently the rise of evo-devo (evolutionary developmental biology) and epigenetic factors have forced a reevaluation of his archrival, Richard Owen. This paper argues that the key to understanding Owen is rooted in his devout Anglicanism through his broad church theology which put Plato into the service of evolutionary theory only now beginning to receive our belated attention. The road to Owen’s evolutionary theory weaved its way from Athens through Jerusalem, finding itself in the contentious intersection of 19th-century Victorian science and religion. Inaccurately mapped by William Paley, Owen’s evolutionary structuralism offered an alternative through science, philosophy, and religion that is only now beginning to be appreciated. Full article
30 pages, 19809 KB  
Article
Multidimensional Catalysts for Public Space Regeneration in Historic Urban Areas: An Exploratory Case Study of Guibeicheng, Wuxi, China
by Zirui Zhan and Suhui Zhang
Sustainability 2026, 18(12), 6302; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18126302 (registering DOI) - 18 Jun 2026
Viewed by 206
Abstract
In the context of China’s stock-based urban renewal, public space regeneration in old urban areas increasingly requires attention to everyday use, inclusive access, local memory, and collaborative governance alongside physical upgrading. Drawing on catalyst theory, this study builds an analytical framework linking catalyst [...] Read more.
In the context of China’s stock-based urban renewal, public space regeneration in old urban areas increasingly requires attention to everyday use, inclusive access, local memory, and collaborative governance alongside physical upgrading. Drawing on catalyst theory, this study builds an analytical framework linking catalyst classification, potential element identification, effectiveness evaluation, actor collaboration, and renewal strategy transformation. The Guibeicheng area of Wuxi, China, is examined using semi-structured interviews, cognitive maps, qualitative coding, space syntax, the analytic hierarchy process, and actor collaboration analysis. The analysis indicates that behavioral and narrative catalysts are closely associated with residents’ everyday use and place identity. Event catalysts may generate phased amplification effects under specific conditions, while organizational and rule-based governance catalysts mainly provide support conditions for sustaining catalytic effects. Comparing space syntax results with cognitive-map and interview evidence further points to mismatches between configurational potential and perceived everyday activation. These include high-integration spaces with limited evidence of repeated everyday use, high-choice nodes mainly associated with pass-through use, weak everyday connections to historical resources, and limited independent organizational support for high-priority catalysts. On this basis, the study proposes a renewal pathway that combines everyday behavior guidance, event transformation, local narrative embedding, and organizational governance coordination. The findings provide a case-based reference for catalyst-oriented public space regeneration in historic urban areas and suggest potential implications for social sustainability, cultural continuity, and community resilience through spatial activation and long-term collaborative governance. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Sustainable Urban Design and Resilient Communities)
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29 pages, 5120 KB  
Article
Diversity and Functional Structure of Beetle Assemblages in a Historic Urban Park in Sibiu, Romania: A Multi-Year Assessment
by Cristina Stancă-Moise, George Moise, Anca Șipoș, Roxana-Florența Săvescu and Cristian Felix Blidar
Diversity 2026, 18(6), 379; https://doi.org/10.3390/d18060379 - 18 Jun 2026
Viewed by 322
Abstract
This study evaluates the multi-year taxonomic diversity and functional structure of beetle assemblages (Coleoptera) within Sub Arini Park, a historic urban green space in Sibiu, Romania. Following a preliminary baseline and methodological calibration phase in 2023, systematic monitoring was conducted during the 2024 [...] Read more.
This study evaluates the multi-year taxonomic diversity and functional structure of beetle assemblages (Coleoptera) within Sub Arini Park, a historic urban green space in Sibiu, Romania. Following a preliminary baseline and methodological calibration phase in 2023, systematic monitoring was conducted during the 2024 and 2025 seasonal cycles utilizing standardized pitfall trapping across diverse park zones. We explicitly tested two hypotheses: (H1) that long-standing historic park management preserves a resilient and functional insect community structure, and (H2) that local spatial heterogeneity and microhabitat variations significantly drive species distribution. A total of 14,843 individuals belonging to 39 species were analyzed. While total abundance exhibited a slight decrease from 2024 (N = 7112) to 2025 (N = 6551), true diversity metrics (Hill numbers) revealed a significant increase in raw species richness (q = 0) from 30 to 39 species, alongside an enhanced equity of frequent species (Shannon diversity, q = 1, increased from 4.26 to 5.12). Functional guild analysis and multivariate PCA demonstrated a highly structured biocenotic distribution; specialist and hygrophilous species (e.g., Carabus variolosus Fabricius, 1787) were strictly constrained to high-humidity riparian corridors, whereas thermophilous generalists dominated open lawns under high anthropogenic stress. Our spatial analysis identified critical degradation within these heavily managed zones, specifically driven by intensive mowing, soil compaction, and organic debris removal. These findings confirm both hypotheses, revealing that the park operates as a heterogeneous mosaic of ecological refugia rather than a uniform habitat block. Crucially, this study provides a concrete, quantitative basis—derived from empirical thresholds of species richness, abundance shifts, and mapped microhabitat preferences—for implementing nature-based management strategies (such as establishing buffer zones with reduced mowing frequencies, limiting trampling, and retaining coarse woody debris) aimed at mitigating urban biodiversity loss and maintaining vital biological pest control services in Central–Eastern Europe. Full article
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16 pages, 11584 KB  
Article
Mapping Sub-Field Crop Water Use Dynamics Using OpenET Data and Zero-Shot Time-Series Foundation Model
by Chinmay Deval and Siddharth Chaudhary
Informatics 2026, 13(6), 95; https://doi.org/10.3390/informatics13060095 - 18 Jun 2026
Viewed by 201
Abstract
Precision agriculture increasingly relies on high-resolution, long-term remote sensing to delineate sub-field management zones. However, traditional spatial zonation assumes temporal stationarity, utilizing seasonal aggregates that obscure transient, intra-annual stress signals. This study develops a data-driven framework to characterize both persistent and non-stationary crop [...] Read more.
Precision agriculture increasingly relies on high-resolution, long-term remote sensing to delineate sub-field management zones. However, traditional spatial zonation assumes temporal stationarity, utilizing seasonal aggregates that obscure transient, intra-annual stress signals. This study develops a data-driven framework to characterize both persistent and non-stationary crop water use dynamics by integrating monthly, 30-m evapotranspiration (ET) data from OpenET (2000–2025) with zero-shot temporal anomaly detection. A pre-trained time-series foundation model (Chronos-T5-Small) generated counterfactual expectations for sub-field ET, quantifying deviations using a mean absolute error-based anomaly score. Unsupervised clustering of these anomaly scores with longitudinal ET metrics partitioned the landscape into dynamic biophysical regimes. Cross-registered against legacy persistence mapping based on seasonal totals, the foundation model showed strong directional agreement (86.1%, Cohen’s Kappa = 0.716) in identifying chronically constrained zones across 869 shared active pixels. Crucially, the framework identified 966 historically persistent pixels undergoing stability decay, of which 95.3% were statistically verified via paired t-tests to have collapsed into the field’s baseline variance pool. Furthermore, counterfactual anomaly detection isolated zones of recent acute divergence, differentiating enduring edaphic constraints from sudden system disruptions. This approach demonstrates how foundation models can transition from purely predictive engines to diagnostic instruments, advancing operational precision agriculture. Full article
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37 pages, 52535 KB  
Article
From Archive to Sustainable Urban Memory: Evidence-Based Digital Interpretation of the Lost Fazlı Pasha Palace in Istanbul
by Ahmet Masrı and Figen Kıvılcım Çorakbaş
Sustainability 2026, 18(12), 6238; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18126238 - 17 Jun 2026
Viewed by 164
Abstract
This study investigates the vanished Fazlı Pasha Palace in Istanbul as a case of lost architectural heritage, addressing the challenges of heritage interpretation, presentation, and integration into contemporary urban contexts. Drawing on contemporary conservation frameworks, the research situates the palace within a broader [...] Read more.
This study investigates the vanished Fazlı Pasha Palace in Istanbul as a case of lost architectural heritage, addressing the challenges of heritage interpretation, presentation, and integration into contemporary urban contexts. Drawing on contemporary conservation frameworks, the research situates the palace within a broader discourse on cultural and urban sustainability, emphasising the interdependence of tangible and intangible heritage values. As a methodology, this study employs a multi-layered, interdisciplinary framework that synthesises archival empirical data, architectural historiography, and GIS-based geospatial analytics. Unlike traditional descriptive methods, this research introduces an integrated digital heritage interpretation model grounded in an evidence-grading system. This system categorises architectural data into three distinct epistemic levels: documented (empirical), inferred (analogous), and hypothetical (conjectural). By implementing this tripartite structure, the design ensures a structured communication of uncertainty, effectively bridging the gap between historical fragmentation and spatial data and stratification while strictly adhering to contemporary conservation approaches that critically limit speculative reconstruction in the cases of lost urban layers. The findings, supported by GIS spatial mapping, demonstrate how the palace’s administrative footprint influenced 18th-century Ottoman Istanbul’s urban fabric, of which there is very limited spatial knowledge. Moreover, proposals for effectively reintegrating lost architectural heritage into contemporary urban memory without compromising authenticity or the integrity of existing urban fabric are developed. In doing so, the study contributes to urban sustainability by offering a non-intrusive, reversible, and critically evidence-based approach to heritage interpretation. Beyond the specific case of the Fazlı Pasha Palace, the proposed model provides a transferable methodological framework for the interpretation of lost heritage in complex historic cities, supporting the continuity of cultural memory, identity, and place-based narratives. The research thus advances current debates on digital in-situ presentation of lost heritage, authenticity, and sustainable urban conservation by demonstrating how the memory of vanished buildings can be meaningfully presented and communicated within contemporary urban environments. Full article
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15 pages, 18334 KB  
Article
Mapping Late Holocene Vegetation Change Using Isopollen Analysis: Evidence from the Southeastern Marmara Region, Türkiye
by Çağlar Altıncı, Gülan Güngör and Hülya Caner
Plants 2026, 15(12), 1881; https://doi.org/10.3390/plants15121881 - 17 Jun 2026
Viewed by 179
Abstract
Determining the relative impacts of climate variability and human activities on vegetation dynamics remains a central theme in paleoecological research. In climate transition zones like the southeastern Marmara region, isopollen maps are important because they allow for the evaluation of spatially diverse pollen [...] Read more.
Determining the relative impacts of climate variability and human activities on vegetation dynamics remains a central theme in paleoecological research. In climate transition zones like the southeastern Marmara region, isopollen maps are important because they allow for the evaluation of spatially diverse pollen records within an integrated regional framework. The aim of this study is to present a spatially holistic reconstruction of Late Holocene vegetation change in the southern Marmara region using isopollen maps based on fossil pollen records obtained from Manyas, Iznik and Sapanca lakes. Isopollen maps were created for five time periods, approximately 2600, 2000, 1250, 800 and 400 yr BP, representing major climatic and historical phases of the Late Holocene, and the spatial distribution patterns of the major tree and herbaceous taxa were reconstructed. The results demonstrate the presence of a continuous west–east variability in the region’s vegetation structure, reflecting the transition between Mediterranean and Black Sea climate regimes. However, the temporal variation patterns show that vegetation responses cannot always be directly explained by climatic phases. In particular, Artemisia highlights the persistence and local expansion of open-area vegetation, reaching approximately 24% of the study area to the present day. Given the region’s long history of settlement, these findings indicate that vegetation dynamics during the Late Holocene were shaped by the combined effects of climatic changes, local environmental conditions and human activities. Therefore, the study emphasizes the importance of spatially integrated approaches in paleoecological reconstructions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Plant Systematics, Taxonomy, Nomenclature and Classification)
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Article
Geological and Hydrogeological Controls on Liquefaction Susceptibility in Deltaic Environments: Insights from the Po Delta, Northern Italy
by Dimitra Rapti, George Papathanassiou, Maria Taftsoglou and Riccardo Caputo
Environments 2026, 13(6), 343; https://doi.org/10.3390/environments13060343 - 17 Jun 2026
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Abstract
Liquefaction phenomena are strongly influenced by the depositional evolution of the area, including sediment grain size, depositional age, shallow layering, and groundwater depth. This study focuses on a 560 km2 wide sector of the eastern Po River Plain (northern Italy), encompassing part [...] Read more.
Liquefaction phenomena are strongly influenced by the depositional evolution of the area, including sediment grain size, depositional age, shallow layering, and groundwater depth. This study focuses on a 560 km2 wide sector of the eastern Po River Plain (northern Italy), encompassing part of the modern Po Delta, to evaluate the susceptibility of the different geological units to liquefaction. A comprehensive dataset was compiled, integrating lithological, chronological (14C), geomorphological, hydrological, and hydrogeological information, together with satellite imagery, historical and modern maps, archaeological evidence, and subsurface data from core drilling and CPTu tests. The integrated analysis allowed us to reconstruct a liquefaction susceptibility map recognizing four classes: very high (4% of the investigated area), high (26%), moderate (20%), and non-susceptible (50%). CPTu-based statistical analyses confirm that the Liquefaction Potential Index (LPI) increases with higher susceptibility classes and decreases with increasing groundwater depth (0.5, 1.5, and 3.0 m scenarios). These results provide a scientific basis to support sustainable land management and governance strategies in the Po Delta, an area of high environmental, cultural, and economic value, a large sector of which is included in the Natura 2000 network. Full article
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