Reprint

Ornamental Plants and Urban Gardening

Edited by
January 2024
266 pages
  • ISBN978-3-03928-604-1 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-03928-603-4 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Ornamental Plants and Urban Gardening that was published in

Biology & Life Sciences
Environmental & Earth Sciences
Summary

The interaction of the artificial living communities of cities and the examination of the interaction between plants, plants and microorganisms, and plants and animals is an essential part of sustainability. Creating vital urban areas and increasing their biodiversity is also necessary for sustainability. The monitoring and research of settlement communities as ecological systems serves to a large extent to the perception of the effects of climate change and helps to mitigate them. The sustainability and economic operation of established urban green space systems can be made effective by applying innovative technologies.This Special Issue aims to draw attention to this wide-ranging multidisciplinary research work and to offer solutions for modern urban green space management.

Format
  • Hardback
License and Copyright
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
urban greening; Do-It-Yourself; green walls; community awareness; co-design processes; vertical greening systems; urban green areas; school greening; low-cost greenery systems; construction manuals; interdisciplinary collaboration; student participation; cemetery; urban cemeteries; green space; urban green infrastructure; cemetery tourism; ecosystem services; allergy; plant; pollen; patient education; visual advertising; marine city; plant landscape; computer vision technology; multimodal interaction; five-view plant system; renaissance garden art; plant use; landscape architecture; historic garden; garden heritage; Limonium; saline; salt stress; proline; NaCl; chlorophyll; cross-compatibility; fertility evaluation; interspecific hybridization; urban landscape; Zingiberaceae; woody plants; spontaneous spread; weed; invasive species; native plants; climate change; garden maintenance; Rudbeckia hirta; ornamental; urban green; gamma; breeding; annual; gardening; heritage protection; historic gardens; visibility; tree compositions; functional traits; invasion biology; nectar production; native plants; non-native plants; urban greenspaces; plants; green roof landscape; intelligent interaction design; computer visual design; marine cities; ornamental plants; urban gardening; green areas; landscape architecture