Existing evidence on the effect of urban forest management in carbon solutions and avian conservation: a systematic literature map.

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC
Kayleigh Hutt-Taylor, Corinne G Bassett, Riikka P Kinnunen, Barbara Frei, Carly D Ziter
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Urgent solutions are needed in cities to mitigate twin crises of global climate change and biodiversity loss. Urban nature-based solutions (actions that protect, sustainably manage, and restore ecosystems while simultaneously providing human wellbeing and biodiversity benefits) are being advocated for as multi-functional tools capable of tackling these societal challenges. Urban forest management is a proposed nature-based solution with potential to address both climate change mitigation and biodiversity loss along with multiple other benefits. However, bodies of evidence measuring multiple outcomes (e.g., biodiversity conservation and nature-based climate solutions) remain siloed which limits conservation and management opportunities. In this article, we present a systematic map of the literature on urban forest management strategies that measure both biodiversity goals (through avian conservation) and climate change mitigation goals (through carbon storage and sequestration).

Methods: Following a published protocol, we searched for evidence related to urban forest management strategies for (1) avian conservation and (2) carbon solutions within the global temperate region in academic and grey literature. In addition to Scopus, ProQuest and Web of Science Core Collection, we searched 21 specialist websites. We screened English language documents using predefined inclusion criteria on titles and abstracts, and then full texts. All qualifying literature items were coded, and metadata were extracted. No study validity appraisal was conducted. We identified knowledge clusters and gaps related to forest management strategies for both topics.

Review findings: Our searches identified 19,073 articles published, of which 5445 were duplicates. The title and abstract screening removed a further 11,019 articles. After full-text screening (1762 and 1406), a total of 277 avian and 169 forest carbon literature items met the eligibility criteria and were included in the final database. We found a large knowledge base for broad-scale avian metrics: abundance, species richness. We similarly found that both avian and carbon solutions most often used broad-scale forest management components: land use type, composition, and forested area and least often considered fragmentation, connectivity, and diversity metrics (abundance, richness). The most understudied avian metrics were foraging, resources, and survival while the most understudied carbon solutions metrics were soil carbon, dead wood and organic matter and infrastructure. Avian literature most often used an experimental design (56% with comparator, 44% no comparator) while forest carbon solutions literature was dominated by observational studies (86%). In both topics, studies most often occurred over short timelines between 0 and 1 and 2-5 years. The body of evidence for both avian and carbon outcomes present a scale-mismatch between the scale of forest management strategy (e.g., land use type) and scale of application (e.g., patch). For example, the majority of studies considered forest strategies at broad scales, like land use type or composition, yet were conducted at a patch or multi-patch scale. Our systematic map also highlights that multi-city and regional urban scales are underrepresented in both carbon solutions and avian conservation and will require additional research efforts. Finally, we highlight gaps in the inclusion of recommendations in both bodies of literature. Roughly 30% of articles in each topic's database did not include recommendations for practitioners or researchers.

Conclusions: Our systematic map provides a database and identifies knowledge gaps and clusters of urban forest management strategies for (1) avian conservation and (2) carbon solutions. Overall, our map will allow researchers to fill existing gaps in literature through new research investigations, meta-analyses or systematic reviews while also pointing policymakers toward strong knowledge bases in addition to understudied or mismatched areas that require more funding.

关于城市森林管理在碳解决方案和鸟类保护方面效果的现有证据:系统文献图。
背景:城市亟需解决方案来缓解全球气候变化和生物多样性丧失的双重危机。以城市自然为基础的解决方案(保护、可持续管理和恢复生态系统,同时为人类福祉和生物多样性带来益处的行动)作为能够应对这些社会挑战的多功能工具而得到提倡。城市森林管理是一种以自然为基础的拟议解决方案,有可能同时解决气候变化减缓和生物多样性丧失问题,并带来其他多种益处。然而,衡量多种结果(如生物多样性保护和基于自然的气候解决方案)的证据仍然是孤立的,这限制了保护和管理的机会。在这篇文章中,我们对同时衡量生物多样性目标(通过鸟类保护)和气候变化减缓目标(通过碳储存和固存)的城市森林管理策略的文献进行了系统性的梳理:方法:根据已公布的协议,我们在学术文献和灰色文献中搜索了全球温带地区与城市森林管理战略相关的证据,以实现(1)鸟类保护和(2)碳解决方案。除了 Scopus、ProQuest 和 Web of Science Core Collection 之外,我们还搜索了 21 个专业网站。我们使用预定义的标题和摘要纳入标准筛选英文文献,然后再筛选全文。我们对所有合格的文献项目进行了编码,并提取了元数据。未进行研究有效性评估。我们确定了与这两个主题的森林管理策略相关的知识集群和差距:我们在检索中发现了 19073 篇已发表的文章,其中 5445 篇为重复文章。标题和摘要筛选又删除了 11,019 篇文章。经过全文筛选(1762 篇和 1406 篇),共有 277 篇鸟类和 169 篇森林碳文献符合资格标准并被纳入最终数据库。我们发现,在鸟类的大尺度指标:丰度、物种丰富度方面有一个庞大的知识库。我们同样发现,鸟类和碳解决方案最常使用的是大尺度森林管理要素:土地利用类型、组成和森林面积,而最不常考虑的是破碎化、连通性和多样性指标(丰度、丰富度)。鸟类最缺乏研究的指标是觅食、资源和生存,而碳解决方案最缺乏研究的指标是土壤碳、枯木和有机物以及基础设施。鸟类文献最常使用的是实验设计(56%有参照物,44%无参照物),而森林碳解决方案文献则以观察研究为主(86%)。在这两个主题中,研究时间最短的是 0 至 1 年,最长的是 2 至 5 年。有关鸟类和碳排放结果的证据表明,森林管理策略的规模(如土地利用类型)与应用规模(如斑块)之间存在规模不匹配的现象。例如,大多数研究都考虑了大尺度的森林策略,如土地利用类型或组成,但都是在斑块或多斑块尺度上进行的。我们的系统地图还强调,多城市和区域城市尺度在碳解决方案和鸟类保护方面的代表性不足,需要更多的研究努力。最后,我们强调了这两类文献在纳入建议方面存在的差距。在每个主题的数据库中,约有 30% 的文章未包含对从业人员或研究人员的建议:我们的系统地图提供了一个数据库,并确定了城市森林管理战略在以下方面的知识差距和集群:(1) 鸟类保护;(2) 碳解决方案。总之,我们的地图将使研究人员能够通过新的研究调查、荟萃分析或系统综述来填补现有的文献空白,同时也为政策制定者指明了强大的知识库,以及研究不足或不匹配的领域,这些领域需要更多的资金支持。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.20
自引率
4.30%
发文量
567
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