Jussi Lampinen , Minna M. Huovinen , Pasi Pouta , D. Johan Kotze
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Urban grassland restoration has the potential to mitigate biodiversity loss in cities, but effective restoration planning calls for an accurate understanding on how and why the extent of grasslands in cities changes through time and ongoing urbanization. This can help assess regional baselines for grassland restoration and identify urban grasslands of high biodiversity value, but also more broadly to reflect on the aims and outcomes of restoration in different parts of the city. In this paper, we use historical and contemporary spatial data to quantify the extent of different types of grasslands across the late 19th-century and present-day Helsinki capital region, Finland. We assess the overall and spatially explicit changes in grassland extent between these periods and link these changes to patterns of land cover change, with spatial overlap analyses. Our results suggest that urban green infrastructure supports many types of contemporary grasslands, but to a smaller extent and primarily in different places compared to the historical semi-natural grasslands in the 19th-century landscape preceding urban development. Changes in grassland extent in the study region comprise local increases and decreases between the two time periods examined, with land cover changes related to urbanization underlying both of these changes. Grasslands that remain in the study region are dispersed across a diverse set of land cover types, with urban land cover such as parks, sports fields, and road verges hosting the majority of contemporary grasslands. Our results help identify diverse pathways for fostering biodiversity typical to grasslands in cities.
期刊介绍:
Urban Forestry and Urban Greening is a refereed, international journal aimed at presenting high-quality research with urban and peri-urban woody and non-woody vegetation and its use, planning, design, establishment and management as its main topics. Urban Forestry and Urban Greening concentrates on all tree-dominated (as joint together in the urban forest) as well as other green resources in and around urban areas, such as woodlands, public and private urban parks and gardens, urban nature areas, street tree and square plantations, botanical gardens and cemeteries.
The journal welcomes basic and applied research papers, as well as review papers and short communications. Contributions should focus on one or more of the following aspects:
-Form and functions of urban forests and other vegetation, including aspects of urban ecology.
-Policy-making, planning and design related to urban forests and other vegetation.
-Selection and establishment of tree resources and other vegetation for urban environments.
-Management of urban forests and other vegetation.
Original contributions of a high academic standard are invited from a wide range of disciplines and fields, including forestry, biology, horticulture, arboriculture, landscape ecology, pathology, soil science, hydrology, landscape architecture, landscape planning, urban planning and design, economics, sociology, environmental psychology, public health, and education.