4.7 Article

Diversity and structure in California's urban forest: What over six million data points tell us about one of the world's largest urban forests

Journal

URBAN FORESTRY & URBAN GREENING
Volume 74, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER GMBH
DOI: 10.1016/j.ufug.2022.127679

Keywords

Tree diversity; Diversity metric; Urban forestry; Municipal forest; Tree benefits; Urban ecosystem services

Funding

  1. CAL FIRE [8GB18415]
  2. US Forest Service [21 -CS -11052021-201]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Urban street trees provide benefits to communities, and the California Urban Forest (CUF) Inventory offers high-quality data to assess the structure and diversity of California's urban forests, which are among the most diverse in the world.
Urban street trees provide many benefits to surrounding communities, but our ability to assess such benefits relies on the availability of high-quality urban tree data. While these data are numerous, they are not available in an easily accessible, centralized place. To fill this gap, we aggregated public and private data into a single, comprehensive inventory of urban trees in California called the California Urban Forest (CUF) Inventory. These data are offered to the public (aggregated to ZIP code) via an online data portal, which at the time of publication contained over 6.6 million urban tree records. In this study, we first describe the assembly and utility of the inventory. Then, we conduct the most comprehensive assessment of the diversity and structure of California's urban forest to date at statewide, regional, and local spatial scales. These analyses demonstrate that California's urban forests are highly diverse and among the most diverse urban forests in the world. We present a new and intuitive metric of species diversity, the top diversity or TD-50 index, which represents the cumulative number of species accounting for the top 50 % abundance of trees in an urban forest. We used species abundance data from 81 well-inventoried cities to demonstrate that the TD-50 index was a robust metric of diversity and a good predictor of comprehensive metrics like the Shannon Index. We also found that small-statured trees, such as crape myrtles (Lagerstroemia cv.) dominate California's urban forests. This aggregated inventory of one of the world's largest urban forests provides the data necessary to assess the structure, diversity, and value of Cal-ifornia's urban forests at multiple spatial scales. The inventory's presentation to the public and the information that can be gained from its analysis can be a model for urban forest management worldwide.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available