About Dunefield.eu

An editorial archive covering sand dune habitats, coastal plant communities, and shoreline documentation across Italy's major coastlines.

What This Archive Covers

Dunefield.eu compiles documented observations, research summaries, and geographic records related to Italy's coastal dune systems. The archive spans the Adriatic, Tyrrhenian, and Sardinian coastlines, focusing on habitats listed under the EU Habitats Directive and monitored by national and regional environmental bodies.

The content draws from peer-reviewed studies, official environmental assessments, and publicly accessible field surveys. Articles follow a factual format — recording current conditions, known species distributions, and documented threats without advocacy or commercial framing.

Geographic Scope

The archive concentrates on three primary coastal zones:

  • Adriatic coast — from Emilia-Romagna to Puglia, including the degraded dune barriers near Ravenna and the partially intact foredune systems of Gargano.
  • Tyrrhenian coast — the Lazio and Calabria shorelines, where dune vegetation at Circeo and Capo Vaticano retains high ecological value despite surrounding urban pressure.
  • Sardinian coastlines — the island holds Italy's most extensive intact dune fields, including the Piscinas desert-dunes in the southwest and the fixed coastal dunes at Capo Comino in the northeast.

Editorial Approach

Articles are written from documented sources. Where precise measurements or species counts are cited, the original assessment or study is identified. General ecological context draws from the EUNIS Habitat Classification, the ISPRA national inventory, and peer-reviewed literature in coastal geomorphology and vegetation science.

No content on this site constitutes legal, conservation management, or planning advice. The archive is provided for informational and research reference purposes.

Contact & Correspondence

For factual corrections or source queries, contact the editorial address below. Response time is typically five to ten working days.