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Keywords = non-metropolitan urbanisation

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27 pages, 8854 KB  
Article
Functional and Symbolic Urban Typologies in a Fragmented Non-Metropolitan Region: The Case of Santa Catarina, Southern Brazil
by Felipe Teixeira Dias, Ángel Rodríguez-Pallas, Priscila Cembranel and André Riani Costa Perinotto
Urban Sci. 2026, 10(7), 385; https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci10070385 - 3 Jul 2026
Abstract
This exploratory study examines the heterogeneous spatial evolution of cities in a fragmented non-metropolitan region of Southern Brazil and develops an original functional-symbolic typological framework that integrates functional performance and symbolic production in the classification of cities. Grounded in the theoretical contributions of [...] Read more.
This exploratory study examines the heterogeneous spatial evolution of cities in a fragmented non-metropolitan region of Southern Brazil and develops an original functional-symbolic typological framework that integrates functional performance and symbolic production in the classification of cities. Grounded in the theoretical contributions of Lefebvre, Santos, and Corrêa, the framework was designed by the authors to simultaneously incorporate economic, territorial, cultural, and identity-related dimensions that are typically analysed separately in conventional urban typologies. The research adopts a qualitative and inductive approach to analyse secondary data from municipalities in the state of Santa Catarina. Rather than treating urbanisation as a homogeneous process, the study conceptualises urban typologies as analytical devices capable of revealing differentiated urban trajectories, uneven capacities of territorial articulation, and distinct modes of governance in non-metropolitan contexts. The findings show that cities with similar demographic scales perform diverse social, cultural, and economic roles shaped by historically and symbolically produced spatial relations. Five urban typologies were identified: Multifunctional Metropolises, Industrial Regional Capitals, Agroindustrial Cities, Cultural Tourist Cities, and Local Centres of Basic Function. The results demonstrate that urban centrality in non-metropolitan regions is not determined solely by economic performance or demographic scale, but also by symbolic attributes such as cultural heritage, territorial identities, festivals, and religious functions. By integrating material and symbolic dimensions within a single analytical structure, the proposed framework advances the understanding of fragmented urban systems, contributes to contemporary debates on non-metropolitan urbanisation and territorial governance, and offers a transferable approach for the analysis of urban diversity beyond the Brazilian context. The findings also provide practical implications for regional planning and public policy by highlighting the role of symbolic production in shaping territorial organisation and regional influence. Full article
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28 pages, 35357 KB  
Article
Spatiotemporal Trajectories and Divergent Drivers of Cropland Non-Grain Use: Evidence from the Changsha–Zhuzhou–Xiangtan Urban Agglomeration, China
by De Yu, Qianjun Wei, Zhenguo Huang, Qi Zhou, Jie Tan and Jingfeng Xiao
Land 2026, 15(6), 985; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15060985 - 4 Jun 2026
Viewed by 322
Abstract
Cropland non-grain use has become an important challenge for food security and cropland governance in rapidly urbanising agricultural regions, yet its trajectory heterogeneity and the divergence between current spatial patterns and long-term-change mechanisms remain insufficiently understood. Taking the Changsha–Zhuzhou–Xiangtan (CZT) urban agglomeration in [...] Read more.
Cropland non-grain use has become an important challenge for food security and cropland governance in rapidly urbanising agricultural regions, yet its trajectory heterogeneity and the divergence between current spatial patterns and long-term-change mechanisms remain insufficiently understood. Taking the Changsha–Zhuzhou–Xiangtan (CZT) urban agglomeration in China as a case, this study quantified the cropland non-grain rate (NGR) on a 1 km grid for 2000, 2010, and 2020, classified grid-level transition trajectories, and developed three temporally structured eXtreme Gradient Boosting (XGBoost) models with spatial block cross-validation, Shapley additive explanations (SHAP) interpretation, and geographically explicit SHAP (GeoSHAP) local attribution. The results show that low-NGR and stable grids formed the dominant regional background, while recent NGR increases were mainly concentrated along the urban development corridor and metropolitan fringe. Current NGR status and long-term NGR change showed divergent explanatory structures. The current spatial pattern was mainly associated with terrain constraints and contemporary urban pressure, whereas long-term change was more strongly conditioned by baseline urbanisation and subsequent urban–environmental changes. Nonlinear dependence analysis further identified model-derived response zones related to slope, impervious surface conditions, hydrothermal change, and hydrological proximity. GeoSHAP mapping revealed that locally dominant mechanisms varied substantially across the study area, indicating that cropland non-grain use was shaped by spatially heterogeneous combinations of terrain, urbanisation, hydrothermal background, and hydrological context. These findings support a shift from aggregate status monitoring toward trajectory-specific and mechanism-differentiated cropland management in urban agglomerations. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Land Use, Impact Assessment and Sustainability)
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18 pages, 4648 KB  
Article
Agricultural Land Suitability Analysis for Land Use Planning: The Case of the Madrid Region
by Nerea Morán-Alonso, Andrés Viedma-Guiard, Marian Simón-Rojo and Rafael Córdoba-Hernández
Land 2025, 14(1), 134; https://doi.org/10.3390/land14010134 - 10 Jan 2025
Cited by 16 | Viewed by 5344
Abstract
Agricultural land is a key resource for territorial resilience. In the European context, fertile soils are under pressure not only from urbanisation processes, abandonment and the establishment of non-agricultural uses but also from agriculture that is not well adapted to territorial resources. In [...] Read more.
Agricultural land is a key resource for territorial resilience. In the European context, fertile soils are under pressure not only from urbanisation processes, abandonment and the establishment of non-agricultural uses but also from agriculture that is not well adapted to territorial resources. In order to inform urban planning, a methodology is proposed and applied to the Madrid region to analyse the suitability of agricultural land uses with respect to agrological quality. The majority of agricultural uses in the region are well adapted to the agroecological quality of the land; larger areas of over-exploited land are located along some of the region’s rivers and in the Campiña, while under-utilised land is mainly found in the south-west and in the metropolitan comarcas. This methodology is based on official and open-access information, so it can be easily replicated and used to inform land planning. We propose three strategies depending on the suitability of land use: the introduction of crops in priority areas for horticulture or arable crops, agricultural protection areas and ecological regeneration areas. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Sustainable Agricultural Land Management towards a Net-Zero Pathway)
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16 pages, 3087 KB  
Article
Water Colour Shapes Diving Beetle (Coleoptera: Dytiscidae) Assemblages in Urban Ponds
by Wenfei Liao
Insects 2024, 15(5), 308; https://doi.org/10.3390/insects15050308 - 25 Apr 2024
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 4251
Abstract
Dramatic land-use changes in urban landscapes can drive water colour darkening by washing compounds, such as organic matter and iron, from terrestrial ecosystems into urban blue space, consequentially affecting aquatic communities. Here, I studied how pond water colour changes along an urban gradient [...] Read more.
Dramatic land-use changes in urban landscapes can drive water colour darkening by washing compounds, such as organic matter and iron, from terrestrial ecosystems into urban blue space, consequentially affecting aquatic communities. Here, I studied how pond water colour changes along an urban gradient and how diving beetles (Dytiscidae) respond to the water colour gradient in 11 ponds with fish and 15 ponds without fish in the Helsinki Metropolitan Area, Finland. I found that the pond water colour exhibited a non-significant decreasing pattern along the urban gradient, indicating that urbanisation may not necessarily drive brownification in urban ponds. Dytiscid species richness and abundance exhibited significant positive correlations with increasing water colour in ponds with fish but no significant correlation in ponds without fish. Some species, such as Agabus spp. and Dytiscus spp., appeared tolerant to highly coloured water, whereas some species, such as Hyphydrus ovatus and Hygrotus spp., tended to occur in clear water, indicating that brown water may provide dytiscids with prey refuges, but some species are intolerant to brown water. The study highlights the importance of urban pondscape heterogeneity to meet the needs of aquatic invertebrates that prefer different water colours and for the multifunctioning of urban ponds. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Aquatic Insects: Diversity, Ecology and Evolution)
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