Jinzhou Wu , Robbe Neyns , Markus Münzinger , Frank Canters
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Over the past decades, pollen allergy has become one of the most widespread public health issues. The number of individuals having allergies to pollen has dramatically increased, especially in urban and industrial areas. Quantifying the allergenic potential of urban green spaces and developing allergy sensitive strategies for green space management and planning are therefore becoming increasingly important. Mapping the allergenicity of urban parks requires detailed information on tree species and tree crown volume which for many cities is not available or is not updated on a regular basis. This study assesses the potential of very high-resolution remote sensing for mapping allergenic tree genera and proposes a workflow for quantifying the allergenic potential of urban green spaces (UGS). Using a convolutional network approach six allergenic genera are mapped within 52 urban green spaces across the Brussels Capital Region. The classification model achieves an overall accuracy of 0.86, with precision for the six genera ranging from 0.82 to 0.92. By combining the obtained map with tree crown measures derived from airborne LiDAR data an assessment of the allergenicity of the 52 UGS is made, accounting for misclassification bias in the mapping of tree genera. Smaller, often more centrally located neighborhood parks have the lowest index values. Landscape parks and protected habitats in the periphery of the region have higher allergenicity values.
期刊介绍:
The ultimate aim of Ecological Indicators is to integrate the monitoring and assessment of ecological and environmental indicators with management practices. The journal provides a forum for the discussion of the applied scientific development and review of traditional indicator approaches as well as for theoretical, modelling and quantitative applications such as index development. Research into the following areas will be published.
• All aspects of ecological and environmental indicators and indices.
• New indicators, and new approaches and methods for indicator development, testing and use.
• Development and modelling of indices, e.g. application of indicator suites across multiple scales and resources.
• Analysis and research of resource, system- and scale-specific indicators.
• Methods for integration of social and other valuation metrics for the production of scientifically rigorous and politically-relevant assessments using indicator-based monitoring and assessment programs.
• How research indicators can be transformed into direct application for management purposes.
• Broader assessment objectives and methods, e.g. biodiversity, biological integrity, and sustainability, through the use of indicators.
• Resource-specific indicators such as landscape, agroecosystems, forests, wetlands, etc.