Linear green infrastructures along rivers and canals serve different functions: Green corridors, or ecological network, maintain biological diversity, improve water quality, and provide areas for fauna and flora to grow and thrive. Greenways connect people with landscape resources and serve as recreational areas that are easy to use and accessible to the greatest number of potential human users. Both ecological networks and greenways are linear structures crossing the landscape, both perform a connecting function in that they are elements created for migration and movement (in one case of flora and fauna and in the other of humans), and both generally contain vegetation. Greenways can be divided into three major categories: ecological greenways, recreational greenways, and greenways with historical/cultural value. When an ecological greenway is planned and designed, human-wildlife conflicts must be minimised.
Fumagalli, N., & Toccolini, A. (2012). Relationship Between Greenways and Ecological Network: A Case
Study in Italy. International Journal of Environmental Research, 6(4), 903-916. doi: 10.22059/ijer.2012.561
MLA
N. Fumagalli; A. Toccolini. "Relationship Between Greenways and Ecological Network: A Case
Study in Italy", International Journal of Environmental Research, 6, 4, 2012, 903-916. doi: 10.22059/ijer.2012.561
HARVARD
Fumagalli, N., Toccolini, A. (2012). 'Relationship Between Greenways and Ecological Network: A Case
Study in Italy', International Journal of Environmental Research, 6(4), pp. 903-916. doi: 10.22059/ijer.2012.561
VANCOUVER
Fumagalli, N., Toccolini, A. Relationship Between Greenways and Ecological Network: A Case
Study in Italy. International Journal of Environmental Research, 2012; 6(4): 903-916. doi: 10.22059/ijer.2012.561