可持续城市规划需要更强的跨学科性和更好的共同设计:生态学家和气候学家如何充分利用气候监测数据

Hélène Audusseau, Reto Schmucki, Solène Croci, Vincent Dubreuil
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摘要

研究提供了大量证据,证明温度对物种生物学有重大影响。气温的影响如此之大,以至于有人提出了气候走廊,以帮助物种在宏观生态尺度上追踪其气候生态位,从而加强了在所有尺度上考虑这一变量的重要性,以应对气候对生物多样性的威胁。这种威胁在城市中更加严重,因为城市中的人工化增强了气候变化的影响,以至于城市温度成为一个公共健康问题,热浪造成过高的人类死亡率,并对生物多样性产生严重影响。气候监测网络的最新发展使人们能够更详细地描述城市气候的时空结构,许多城市已经配备了这种网络。在这些网络所允许的相同范围内,温度对生物多样性的影响还从未被探索过。在科学证据的基础上,描述城市气候基础设施和凉爽走廊的特征,进而描述物种的热连通性,将丰富和加强现有的生态基础设施。在本视角中,我们将讨论生态学家和气候学家之间加强合作如何有助于充分发挥城市气候监测网络的潜力。我们强调了这些网络在研究城市气候对生物多样性的影响方面所能提供的研究机会,以及为实现共同设计并使跨学科合作投入运行而需要做出的努力。这种关于城市气候及其影响的跨学科研究尤为重要,因为其成果有助于更好地为城市规划提供信息,并减轻气候变化对人类和生物多样性的影响:气候与发展> 城市化、发展与气候变化 评估气候变化的影响> 已观察到的气候变化影响 气候、生态与保护> 已观察到的生态变化
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Sustainable urban planning needs stronger interdisciplinarity and better co‐designing: How ecologists and climatologists can fully leverage climate monitoring data
Research has provided considerable evidence that temperature significantly influences species biology. Its influence is so great that climate corridors have been proposed to assist species in tracking their climatic niche at macroecological scales, reinforcing the importance of accounting for this variable at all scales to address the climatic threat to biodiversity. This threat is exacerbated in cities where artificialization enhances the effect of climate change, to the extent that urban temperatures are a public health concern, with heatwaves causing excess human mortality and having a stark impact on biodiversity. Recent developments in climate monitoring networks enable characterizing the spatiotemporal structure of urban climates in ever greater detail, with many cities already equipped with such networks. The impact of temperature on biodiversity, on the same scale as these networks allows, has never been explored. Characterizing urban climate infrastructures and cool corridors, and thus thermal connectivity for species, would enrich and strengthen existing ecological infrastructures, on the basis of scientific evidence. In this perspective, we discuss how stronger collaborations between ecologists and climatologists could help leverage the full potential of urban climate monitoring networks. We highlight research opportunities they could offer in terms of studying the impact of urban climate on biodiversity and the efforts that need to be pursued to enable co‐designing and make interdisciplinary collaborations operational. Such interdisciplinary research on urban climate and its impact is all the more important that its outcomes can help better inform urban planning and mitigate the impacts of climate change on people and biodiversity.This article is categorized under: Climate and Development > Urbanization, Development, and Climate Change Assessing Impacts of Climate Change > Observed Impacts of Climate Change Climate, Ecology, and Conservation > Observed Ecological Changes
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