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16 pages, 940 KB  
Article
Environmental Worldviews and Litter Management Behaviors in Idaho Parks and Protected Areas
by Mary Engels, Mandira Panta and Chris A. B. Zajchowski
Sustainability 2026, 18(12), 5968; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18125968 - 11 Jun 2026
Viewed by 151
Abstract
Littering in U.S. parks and protected areas poses an increasing management challenge as visitation rises. We examined how environmental worldviews influenced litter disposal behaviors and management preferences among recreational visitors. Surveys were administered to campers (N = 537) across four Idaho State [...] Read more.
Littering in U.S. parks and protected areas poses an increasing management challenge as visitation rises. We examined how environmental worldviews influenced litter disposal behaviors and management preferences among recreational visitors. Surveys were administered to campers (N = 537) across four Idaho State Parks and one U.S. National Forest. Using the revised New Environmental Paradigm (NEP) results indicate that campers held moderately strong pro-environmental worldviews (M = 3.84 out of 5), with 86% of respondents expressing concern about litter in public spaces. Multiple linear regression analysis revealed that higher NEP scores significantly predicted self-reported waste disposal behavior (β = 0.234, p < 0.001), though frequency of camping did not. Linear mixed-effect modeling showed that NEP significantly predicted overall support for litter reduction strategies (F(1, 473) = 48.528, p < 0.001), with campers rating infrastructure-based approaches more favorably than enforcement (i.e., monetary fines). The NEP x strategy interaction, however, revealed that campers with higher NEP scores were more open to monetary fines than campers with lower NEP scores. These findings suggest recreational users with pro-ecological worldviews will support a range of interventions to reduce litter when provided adequate infrastructure and information. The high NEP scores among recreational users provide optimism for implementing effective pro-environmental strategies that support the long-term sustainability of public recreational spaces. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Social Ecology and Sustainability)
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24 pages, 5733 KB  
Article
Spatial Clustering Patterns of Domestic and International Tourists: Integrating Machine Learning Classification with Spatial Statistics for Bilingual Review Analysis
by Narong Pleerux, Parinya Nakpathom and Phannipha Anuraksakornkul
ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2026, 15(6), 255; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi15060255 - 8 Jun 2026
Viewed by 291
Abstract
Tourism destinations increasingly serve both domestic and international visitors whose geographic behaviors may differ substantially, yet most analytical frameworks treat visitor distributions as spatially homogeneous. Few studies compare how domestic and international tourists cluster spatially within the same destination. Those differences matter enormously [...] Read more.
Tourism destinations increasingly serve both domestic and international visitors whose geographic behaviors may differ substantially, yet most analytical frameworks treat visitor distributions as spatially homogeneous. Few studies compare how domestic and international tourists cluster spatially within the same destination. Those differences matter enormously for destinations where visitor segments follow distinct geographic patterns. We analyzed 1547 bilingual TripAdvisor reviews from Chanthaburi Province, Thailand (2014–2023), combining Random Forest classification (83.26% accuracy for Thai, 96.45% for English) with Incremental Spatial Autocorrelation (ISA), Global Moran’s I, and Getis-Ord Gi* hotspot analysis. International visitors clustered more intensely overall (I = 0.253 vs. 0.213), but domestic visitors spread across all six tourism areas including agrotourism, while international visitors were concentrated in heritage, coastal recreation, and nature-temple zones with agrotourism absent. Both segments clustered strongly at cultural heritage sites and at beach destinations, contradicting the common assumption that coastal areas primarily serve international visitors, while agrotourism clustered exclusively among domestic visitors despite active policy promotion. These patterns reflect differential information access rather than attraction quality. The zone-level framework is transferable to secondary heritage destinations across Southeast Asia, where platform-based monitoring offers a practical alternative to large-scale visitor surveys. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Geospatial AI: Systems, Model, Methods, and Applications)
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19 pages, 1954 KB  
Article
User Preferences Regarding Forest Trail Infrastructure—Implications for Socially Sensitive Planning: A Pilot Study
by Agata Kobyłka and Natalia Korcz
Forests 2026, 17(5), 597; https://doi.org/10.3390/f17050597 - 15 May 2026
Viewed by 303
Abstract
Forests in Poland play a key recreational role, and the growing interest in sylvaturism requires optimized management. Despite the growing body of research on forest recreation, existing studies rarely address the role of small-scale infrastructure in shaping user preferences and its integration into [...] Read more.
Forests in Poland play a key recreational role, and the growing interest in sylvaturism requires optimized management. Despite the growing body of research on forest recreation, existing studies rarely address the role of small-scale infrastructure in shaping user preferences and its integration into spatial planning frameworks, which constitutes a research gap in this study. This study aimed to identify user preferences for small infrastructure and to develop an application-oriented, socially sensitive model for forest trail design that supports sustainable management. The research was conducted in 2021–2024 using the CAWI method on a group of 402 adult Poles. Data analysis included descriptive statistics, Pearson’s chi-square tests to assess demographic differences, and correspondence analysis to identify user preference profiles. The results not only confirmed a clear hierarchy of needs but also demonstrated that differences between user groups relate primarily to the intensity rather than the structure of preferences. A clear hierarchy of needs was confirmed, with route map boards (86.32%), educational boards (72.64%), and benches (71.14%) dominating. Based on the results, a modular design model was developed (modules: basic, comfort, accessibility, and activity), which constitutes a conceptual advancement over existing planning approaches by introducing a flexible, user-oriented framework that links social preferences with spatial decision-making. By integrating empirical social data into the planning process, the proposed framework extends current knowledge on recreation planning and provides a structured basis for adaptive forest trail design. This tool could help managers efficiently channel tourist traffic, protect ecosystems, and promote public health. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Forest and Human Well-Being)
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21 pages, 37464 KB  
Article
Understanding Spatial Patterns and Drivers of Outdoor Recreation Participation in Southeastern National Forests
by Rosny Jean and Kozma Naka
Land 2026, 15(5), 829; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15050829 - 13 May 2026
Viewed by 270
Abstract
This study examines the spatial patterns and key drivers of outdoor recreation participation in the 14 National Forests (NFs) of USDA Forest Service Region 8—covering thirteen southeastern states and El Yunque NF in Puerto Rico (15 forest units in total)—based on data from [...] Read more.
This study examines the spatial patterns and key drivers of outdoor recreation participation in the 14 National Forests (NFs) of USDA Forest Service Region 8—covering thirteen southeastern states and El Yunque NF in Puerto Rico (15 forest units in total)—based on data from the USDA National Visitor Use Monitoring (NVUM) 2010–2014 microdata cycle. We postulated that spatial autocorrelation is statistically significant for individual recreation drivers, particularly around forest boundaries and major road networks. We test for spatial autocorrelation using Global Moran’s I and Local Indicators of Spatial Association (LISA) and identify hot spots with Getis–Ord Gi* statistics. Spatial regression models (OLS, spatial lag, and spatial error) are estimated to assess the effects of proximity to major roads and distance from forest boundaries on population-normalised visitation intensity. We find significant spatial autocorrelation in overall visitation intensity (Global Moran’s I = 0.312, p < 0.001), with high clusters observed within 50 km of forest boundaries and along major Interstate highway corridors. At least four of five key recreation drivers are significantly clustered. Our results provide spatially specific, statistically robust evidence to inform NF management. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue The Role of Land Policy in Shaping Tourism Development: 2nd Edition)
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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 515
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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27 pages, 3555 KB  
Article
A Delphi-Based Evaluation of Mountain Tourism in an Italian Alpine Valley: Between the Present Situation and Future Opportunities
by Giacomo Pagot, Riccardo Da Re and Paola Gatto
Land 2026, 15(4), 645; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15040645 - 14 Apr 2026
Viewed by 407
Abstract
Recreation is a key ecosystem service provided by mountainous areas. The European Alps are a main attraction for tourists due to their natural landscapes. Nature-based recreation and ecotourism are an opportunity for local communities in alpine valleys. However, tourism may also represent a [...] Read more.
Recreation is a key ecosystem service provided by mountainous areas. The European Alps are a main attraction for tourists due to their natural landscapes. Nature-based recreation and ecotourism are an opportunity for local communities in alpine valleys. However, tourism may also represent a threat to fragile mountain environments when large numbers of tourists are involved in touristic models based on heavy use of resources. This study aims to provide insights into how local communities in an alpine valley, the Comelico Valley, see the current tourism demand and its future changes. Comelico shares similar environmental and landscape characteristics with the surrounding valleys but is less developed from the touristic point of view. We used the Delphi method on a panel of nine local tourism experts from different areas of operations. The results about the forecast of future activities to be prioritized highlight the importance of diversification of tourism offer towards sustainable activities closer to the concept of nature-based tourism and ecotourism. Activities to be prioritized for development were hiking and thematic hiking, forest well-being initiatives and experience laboratories. These results suggest a potential need to change the present model of mountain tourism towards a more diversified and soft approach to mountain recreation. Full article
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18 pages, 4724 KB  
Article
Implementing Sustainable Forest Management Through Public Territorial Governance: A Case Study of the Municipal Cork Oak Forest of Alà dei Sardi, Sardinia (Italy)
by Salvatore Seddaiu, Giuseppino Pira, Giovanni Piras, Ilaria Dalla Vecchia, Enrico Bonis, Giulia Fanchin and Pino Angelo Ruiu
Forests 2026, 17(4), 479; https://doi.org/10.3390/f17040479 - 14 Apr 2026
Viewed by 1217
Abstract
Mediterranean cork oak forests provide essential ecosystem services but face increasing threats from climate change, ecosystem simplification, and oak decline. Ensuring their long-term sustainability requires governance approaches that integrate regional planning frameworks with international certification standards. This study presents a pioneering case of [...] Read more.
Mediterranean cork oak forests provide essential ecosystem services but face increasing threats from climate change, ecosystem simplification, and oak decline. Ensuring their long-term sustainability requires governance approaches that integrate regional planning frameworks with international certification standards. This study presents a pioneering case of public cork oak forest management in Alà dei Sardi, Sardinia (Italy), where municipal forest planning was aligned with national and regional regulations and further enhanced through Forest Stewardship Council® (FSC®) certification. The FSC system offers internationally recognized standards and the Ecosystem Services Procedure (FSC-PRO-30-006 v2-1) to verify responsible forest management and quantify key ecosystem benefits. The Alà dei Sardi forest is the first publicly owned municipal cork oak forest to achieve FSC Forest Management certification, with demonstrated positive impacts of its management activities on biodiversity conservation, carbon sequestration and storage, water protection, soil conservation, and recreational services. The certification process integrated management planning, stakeholder engagement, monitoring, and adaptive interventions, showing that public institutions can combine legal frameworks with voluntary standards to enhance ecological performance, accountability, and socio-economic value. This case illustrates a potentially scalable and replicable model for sustainable forest governance, linking territorial planning with market-based mechanisms, and provides a practical example of governance for resilient and multifunctional forest systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Forest Ecosystem Services and Sustainable Management)
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19 pages, 5451 KB  
Article
Functional Trade-Offs in Productive and Structurally Heterogeneous Forests: Insights from the Italian Alps
by Federico Romanato, Silvio Daniele Oggioni, Matteo Vizzarri and Giorgio Vacchiano
Forests 2026, 17(4), 436; https://doi.org/10.3390/f17040436 - 31 Mar 2026
Viewed by 517
Abstract
Forest structure is fundamental for linking ecological processes with management outcomes, and it influences key ecosystem services. However, the high cost and complexity of field data collection often limit the application of structural indices to small-scale studies, constraining operational assessments of forest multifunctionality. [...] Read more.
Forest structure is fundamental for linking ecological processes with management outcomes, and it influences key ecosystem services. However, the high cost and complexity of field data collection often limit the application of structural indices to small-scale studies, constraining operational assessments of forest multifunctionality. This study develops and tests an operational indicator of forest multifunctionality based on the structural heterogeneity index derived from forest management plans (FMPs). We analyzed the dendrometric data from 134 management units across 15 FMPs in the Lombardy region (Italy). Horizontal diversity was quantified using a Gini-based index, calculated from tree diameter-class distributions and combined with stand age, timber stock, and tree density using principal component analysis. Two orthogonal gradients emerged: a productivity gradient and a maturity–structural heterogeneity gradient. Generalized linear mixed models were used to assess their effects on carbon sequestration, timber yield, and touristic–recreational value. Structural heterogeneity was positively associated with all three functions, while productivity showed contrasting effects, particularly a negative relationship with recreational value. These results demonstrate that structural complexity and productivity are not necessarily in conflict and highlight the potential of FMPs as cost-effective data sources for operational, landscape-scale assessments of forest multifunctionality. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Forest Ecology and Management)
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21 pages, 597 KB  
Article
Visitor Typologies for Micro-Zoning in Forest Recreation Sites
by Eran Ketter, Yaara Spiegel and Noga Collins-Kreiner
Land 2026, 15(3), 506; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15030506 - 21 Mar 2026
Viewed by 555
Abstract
Forest recreation sites provide accessible settings for everyday leisure while accommodating multiple, and often competing, uses, making zoning both a central planning challenge and solution. This study advances micro-zoning as a novel, site-scale extension of established recreation zoning concepts, examining how zoning principles [...] Read more.
Forest recreation sites provide accessible settings for everyday leisure while accommodating multiple, and often competing, uses, making zoning both a central planning challenge and solution. This study advances micro-zoning as a novel, site-scale extension of established recreation zoning concepts, examining how zoning principles can be operationalized within intensively used forest recreation areas. Data were collected from 302 visitors using a structured questionnaire on visit patterns, valued forest attributes, disturbances, and socio-demographic characteristics. Descriptive statistics and tests of association were used to identify needs, disturbances, and recurring combinations of use. The results show that these forests function as everyday recreation spaces for diverse group visits, with high importance placed on peacefulness, shade, cleanliness, natural scenery, and basic infrastructure, alongside frequent reports of disturbance from music, crowding, and litter. Building on these patterns, the study develops a micro-zoning framework that delineates three interpretive planning micro-areas: Drive-in Forest Recreation, representing high-intensity, infrastructure-oriented social use; Low-Intensity Recreation, a moderate-use, low-noise nature-oriented area prioritizing separation from disturbance; and Active Recreation Use, comprising movement-focused routes for walking, running, and cycling. The study illustrates how visitor survey data can guide evidence-based micro-zoning and adapt zoning frameworks to the fine spatial grain of intensively used forest recreation sites. Full article
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24 pages, 1412 KB  
Article
Extending the Value–Belief–Norm Model with Assigned Value: A Study on Visitors’ Pro-Environmental Behavior in Forest Ecosystems of National Parks
by Chenchen Han, Zhengsong Xu, Yechen Zhang and Yuanshuang Li
Forests 2026, 17(3), 381; https://doi.org/10.3390/f17030381 - 19 Mar 2026
Viewed by 495
Abstract
The environmentally responsible behavior (ERB) of visitors within forested national parks is critical for balancing biodiversity conservation and sustainable recreation. While the Value–Belief–Norm (VBN) model has been widely used to explain ERB, it has rarely incorporated context-specific value perceptions, such as assigned value. [...] Read more.
The environmentally responsible behavior (ERB) of visitors within forested national parks is critical for balancing biodiversity conservation and sustainable recreation. While the Value–Belief–Norm (VBN) model has been widely used to explain ERB, it has rarely incorporated context-specific value perceptions, such as assigned value. This study extends the VBN model by integrating this construct and examines its role in shaping visitors’ pro-environmental intentions. Taking Qianjiangyuan National Park in China as a case study, we incorporate visitors’ perception of the social value derived from the park’s forest-based ecosystem services into an expanded VBN framework. Data were analyzed using partial least squares structural equation modeling. The results show that assigned value positively influences ERB intention; pro-environmental personal norms are the strongest direct predictor (β = 0.426); and biospheric value, egoistic value, and personal norms significantly foster assigned value formation, whereas altruistic value shows no significant effect. These findings highlight the importance of integrating situational, forest-specific value perceptions into behavioral models and offer management insights for promoting ERB intention through value-congruent communication in forest recreation settings. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Forestry Economy Sustainability and Ecosystem Governance)
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21 pages, 3413 KB  
Article
Designing Sustainable Recreation Corridors Through Spatial Integration of Outdoor Suitability and Ecological Risk: A Case Study of China’s Giant Panda National Park
by Hu Liu, Kun Yuan, Dandan Liu and Liang Yin
Sustainability 2026, 18(6), 2694; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18062694 - 10 Mar 2026
Viewed by 442
Abstract
Balancing tourism development with ecological integrity remains a central challenge in the management of protected areas. This study proposes a spatial framework that integrates the Outdoor Recreation Suitability Index (ORSI) and the Landscape Ecological Risk Index (ERI) to identify and optimize low-impact recreation [...] Read more.
Balancing tourism development with ecological integrity remains a central challenge in the management of protected areas. This study proposes a spatial framework that integrates the Outdoor Recreation Suitability Index (ORSI) and the Landscape Ecological Risk Index (ERI) to identify and optimize low-impact recreation corridors within Giant Panda National Park, China. Recreation suitability and ecological risk were modeled using environmental variables and landscape metrics, respectively. The results reveal a clear spatial pattern: high-suitability zones are concentrated in the central and northeastern areas, characterized by gentle terrain and extensive forest cover, while ecological risk is elevated in fragmented, human-disturbed peripheral regions. Although ORSI and ERI exhibit an overall negative spatial correlation, bivariate analysis reveals localized mismatches—areas where high recreation potential coincides with ecological vulnerability—indicating potential conflict zones. These zones are typically located along transitional park boundaries where accessibility intersects with ecological sensitivity. To mitigate such conflicts, a least-cost path analysis was conducted based on a composite resistance surface combining ORSI and inverted ERI values. The resulting corridor network connects 40 core areas while effectively avoiding ecological hotspots. Corridor buffers are predominantly composed of forest and shrubland, suggesting high environmental compatibility, particularly in the Qinling region. By translating spatial trade-offs into practical corridor design, this study provides a replicable approach for harmonizing recreation planning with conservation objectives. The proposed framework offers actionable guidance for evidence-based zoning, visitor flow management, and adaptive tourism development in ecologically sensitive protected landscapes. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Tourism and Environmental Development: A Sustainable Perspective)
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29 pages, 2818 KB  
Article
Beyond the Footprint: Empirical Land Use and Environmental Patterns of Wind Energy in Mountainous Landscapes
by Andreas Vlamakis, Ioanna Eleftheriou, Sevie Dima, Efi Karra and Panagiotis Papastamatiou
Land 2026, 15(2), 344; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15020344 - 19 Feb 2026
Viewed by 1733
Abstract
In a world of over 8.2 billion people, the land footprint of any infrastructure has become a critical factor in sustainable spatial planning. In the case of wind energy deployment, land use primarily involves hardstands, access roads, and interconnection infrastructure. This study focuses [...] Read more.
In a world of over 8.2 billion people, the land footprint of any infrastructure has become a critical factor in sustainable spatial planning. In the case of wind energy deployment, land use primarily involves hardstands, access roads, and interconnection infrastructure. This study focuses on Greece, a country with complex mountainous terrain, where Wind Power Stations are predominantly installed along ridgelines and slopes. Using GIS analysis based on digitization of actual on-site infrastructure, we measured the land coverage of wind energy facilities with a total installed capacity of nearly 2.6 GW. We found an average land-use intensity of 0.33 hectares per megawatt (ha/MW), placing it near the lower end of the range reported in international literature. For the subset of projects with available energy yield data, the value was 1.58 square meters per megawatt-hour (m2/MWh). This approach provides one of the largest, nationally representative, infrastructure-based estimates of actual wind energy land use in complex terrain. Applying these findings to the onshore wind deployment targets of Greece’s National Energy and Climate Plan (NECP) for 2030 and 2050, we estimate that only 0.02–0.03% of the country’s land area will be occupied by wind energy infrastructure. By comparison, lignite mining has already transformed approximately 0.13% of the national territory—almost four times more land than projected for wind energy use in 2050. Further spatial analysis was conducted to identify the land use categories associated with wind energy infrastructure, while for the subset of projects located within Natura 2000 protected areas, the types of affected habitats were also examined. Treating land coverage as a standalone proxy for environmental impact should be avoided; the study demonstrates the need for a context-sensitive interpretation of land use, accounting for ecological context, land-use compatibility, and positive co-benefits, such as improved forest accessibility, fire prevention works and recreation parks. Repowering maximizes land efficiency by extending wind farm lifetimes without expanding their footprint. Full article
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31 pages, 428 KB  
Article
Hiking- and Mountaineering-Based Wellness Tourism Development in Greece: Towards a Related Regional Policy and Spatial Planning
by Stella Giannakopoulou and Theodora Tzalonikou
Tour. Hosp. 2026, 7(2), 51; https://doi.org/10.3390/tourhosp7020051 - 16 Feb 2026
Viewed by 1294
Abstract
Wellness tourism, mainly connected to meditation, thermal springs and spa resorts, is an emerging tourism sector. At the same time, contact with natural environments through physical exercise, hiking or walking in forests proves significantly positive in terms of stress reduction, relaxation, mental restoration [...] Read more.
Wellness tourism, mainly connected to meditation, thermal springs and spa resorts, is an emerging tourism sector. At the same time, contact with natural environments through physical exercise, hiking or walking in forests proves significantly positive in terms of stress reduction, relaxation, mental restoration and revitalization. In this framework, the unique natural landscapes of mountains, along with their plethora of local cultures, comprise important places for the development of wellness tourism based on hiking, mountaineering, forest bathing, yoga and Pilates practice. In view of this, an online study regarding 234 participants of hiking/mountaineering clubs and yoga/Pilates studios in northern Greece was conducted in 2022. In total, 16 clubs and studios participated in the questionnaire survey, with a random sample consisting of 68% women and 32% men. This study investigated the choices and preferences of people who visit mountains for hiking and mountaineering in Greece. The findings reveal that young people and especially women, who are well educated, engage dynamically in this male-dominated sector. Hiking and mountaineering appear to be habits of commitment and devotion rather than sporadic recreational activities; they are distributed throughout the year and hold strong potential for the sustainable development of peripheral mountainous communities. Relevant policies and spatial planning principles focusing on environmental and cultural responsibility, community involvement, gender inclusivity and diversity of target groups are further suggested to support the development of hiking- and mountaineering-based wellness tourism in mountainous Greece. Full article
40 pages, 13525 KB  
Article
Urban Green Forest Tree Diversity and Its Contribution to Timișoara’s Landscape Architecture
by Alina-Maria Țenche-Constantinescu, Cristian Berar, Emilian Onisan, Ioan Sărac, Sorina Popescu, Ciprian George Fora, Dorin Camen, Daniel Ond Turcu, Romuald Csaba Lorinț, Cristian-Iliuță Găină, Adina Horablaga, Cosmin Alin Popescu, Mihai Valentin Herbei, Lucian Dragomir and Virgil Dacian Lalescu
Plants 2026, 15(4), 603; https://doi.org/10.3390/plants15040603 - 13 Feb 2026
Viewed by 1081
Abstract
Urban forests serve as representations of nature within city landscapes. Green Forest, spanning 5,198,412 square meters, has been incorporated into the Municipality of Timișoara’s public domain and designated as a forest park. This fact increased green space per capita and enriched biodiversity within [...] Read more.
Urban forests serve as representations of nature within city landscapes. Green Forest, spanning 5,198,412 square meters, has been incorporated into the Municipality of Timișoara’s public domain and designated as a forest park. This fact increased green space per capita and enriched biodiversity within Timișoara’s landscape architecture. This study explores the diversity of Green Forest trees and highlights their contribution to the urban landscape. Statistical methods, including comparative and linear relationships analyses, were employed to assess significant variations in the dendrometric parameters of the analyzed tree species: mean tree height, mean trunk diameter at breast height (DBH), tree age, and stand density. Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and cluster analysis were applied to uncover underlying patterns in the data. Using ArchiCAD and Lumion, high-quality 3D visual representations were developed for an ecological education area, an active recreation region, and a passive recreation area within Green Forest. Due to their morphological characteristics and phenotypic traits, the predominant tree species include Quercus robur, Quercus cerris, Quercus rubra, Fraxinus excelsior, Acer platanoides, Acer pseudoplatanus, Ulmus campestris, and Robinia pseudoacacia, which contribute to Timișoara’s urban aesthetic. Moreover, the results of the dendrometric analysis provide a foundation for further research in urban ecology. A key practical application of this study is landscape design renderings, which provide detailed and realistic visualizations to effectively communicate the design and functionality of Green Forest’s spaces. If implemented, these developments will encourage public engagement with nature, promoting mental and physical well-being within the community. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Floriculture and Landscape Architecture—2nd Edition)
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23 pages, 5523 KB  
Article
Mechanisms Underlying the Effects of Recreation Services on Tourist Satisfaction in Forest Parks: A Case Study of the Yangtze River Delta, China
by Caijie Chen, Weilin Zhao and Bing Zhao
Sustainability 2026, 18(4), 1936; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18041936 - 13 Feb 2026
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 439
Abstract
Recreation service evaluation systems are critical to forest park management; however, existing frameworks often emphasize static infrastructure while overlooking tourists’ dynamic perceptions and sentiments. This study develops a comprehensive recreation service evaluation framework by integrating objective geospatial indicators with social media-based tourist feedback. [...] Read more.
Recreation service evaluation systems are critical to forest park management; however, existing frameworks often emphasize static infrastructure while overlooking tourists’ dynamic perceptions and sentiments. This study develops a comprehensive recreation service evaluation framework by integrating objective geospatial indicators with social media-based tourist feedback. A total of 67 forest parks in the Yangtze River Delta were selected as the study area. Descriptive statistics and spatial autocorrelation analyses, including Global and Local Moran’s I, were applied to the statistical properties and spatial patterns of recreation service indicators, tourist comments, and sentiment. In addition, an Extreme Gradient Boosting model with SHAP interpretation was employed to identify key recreation service indicators and explore their non-linear effects on tourist participation and sentiment. The results reveal significant positive spatial clustering of tourist comments and sentiment. Service-related and safety indicators play a dominant role in shaping tourist participation and sentiment patterns, whereas ecological indicators show weaker direct effects. Several indicators exhibit clear non-linear and threshold effects. Overall, recreation service experiences in forest parks are primarily driven by accessibility, service facilities, and safety assurance, and the proposed framework enhances dynamic interpretability and supports the optimization of recreation services. Full article
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