Steep-slope agricultural landscapes cover a small fraction of global agricultural areas.1 Despite the limited coverage, they are relevant for high-quality food and wine production, history, and landscape value. On steep slopes, centuries of effort and tradition have created a unique cultural heritage to be preserved. Here, peculiar traditional local knowledge of soil and water conservation combined with agronomic practices (e.g., dry-stone wall terracing) has been handed down for generations. However, such landscapes are fragile and under threat
International audienceEcosystem services related to biodiversity, including cultural services, are e...
Vineyards have assumed a key role as rural landmarks in recent decades. Investigating vineyard dynam...
Agricultural landscapes with historical hillside vineyard cultivation have a touristic, economic, an...
Extreme viticulture: from a cultural landscape to an economic and environmental sustainability - Boo...
Wine-growing landscapes and the evolution of techniques : high and wide vines and grass-growing. Win...
Agricultural landscapes cultivated in hilly and mountainous areas, often with terracing practice, co...
A sustainable maintenance of grapevine biodiversity at risk of genetic erosion should involve farmer...
In Italy, the landscape appears more and more as the essential element of a sustainable economic dev...
Cultivating in high-steep slope hilly and mountainous landscapes, requires a great effort in terms o...
Steep-slope vineyards are widely distributed in the Mediterranean region and have a pivotal role in ...
The agricultural practice is closely connected with territorial integrity protection and with landsc...
Three Northern Italian regions, Valle d’Aosta, Piedmont and Liguria, have specific identities though...
International audienceVineyard landscapes are now recognized as a strong heritage value. They are on...
According to the World Tourism Organization, sustainable tourism fosters the conservation of natura...
Since ancient times, viticulture has been developing in two opposite trends: quality and quantity. T...
International audienceEcosystem services related to biodiversity, including cultural services, are e...
Vineyards have assumed a key role as rural landmarks in recent decades. Investigating vineyard dynam...
Agricultural landscapes with historical hillside vineyard cultivation have a touristic, economic, an...
Extreme viticulture: from a cultural landscape to an economic and environmental sustainability - Boo...
Wine-growing landscapes and the evolution of techniques : high and wide vines and grass-growing. Win...
Agricultural landscapes cultivated in hilly and mountainous areas, often with terracing practice, co...
A sustainable maintenance of grapevine biodiversity at risk of genetic erosion should involve farmer...
In Italy, the landscape appears more and more as the essential element of a sustainable economic dev...
Cultivating in high-steep slope hilly and mountainous landscapes, requires a great effort in terms o...
Steep-slope vineyards are widely distributed in the Mediterranean region and have a pivotal role in ...
The agricultural practice is closely connected with territorial integrity protection and with landsc...
Three Northern Italian regions, Valle d’Aosta, Piedmont and Liguria, have specific identities though...
International audienceVineyard landscapes are now recognized as a strong heritage value. They are on...
According to the World Tourism Organization, sustainable tourism fosters the conservation of natura...
Since ancient times, viticulture has been developing in two opposite trends: quality and quantity. T...
International audienceEcosystem services related to biodiversity, including cultural services, are e...
Vineyards have assumed a key role as rural landmarks in recent decades. Investigating vineyard dynam...
Agricultural landscapes with historical hillside vineyard cultivation have a touristic, economic, an...