4.6 Article

Linking Urban Tree Cover Change and Local History in a Post-Industrial City

期刊

LAND
卷 10, 期 4, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/land10040403

关键词

aerial imagery; forest emergence; land cover change; land use change; legacy effect; tree planting; urban forest; urban ecosystem; urban park; urban shrinkage

资金

  1. USDA Forest Service Philadelphia Field Station
  2. University of Pennsylvania [14-JV-11242308]
  3. National Socio-Environmental Synthesis Center (SESYNC) under National Science Foundation [DBI-1052875]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study found that there was an increase in urban tree canopy cover in Philadelphia over the past 40 years, and identified key processes that drove this increase, which also imposed legacies on current UTC patterns.
Municipal leaders are pursuing ambitious goals to increase urban tree canopy (UTC), but there is little understanding of the pace and socioecological drivers of UTC change. We analyzed land cover change in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (United States) from 1970-2010 to examine the impacts of post-industrial processes on UTC. We interpreted land cover classes using aerial imagery and assessed historical context using archival newspapers, agency reports, and local historical scholarship. There was a citywide UTC increase of +4.3 percentage points. Substantial UTC gains occurred in protected open spaces related to both purposeful planting and unintentional forest emergence due to lack of maintenance, with the latter phenomenon well-documented in other cities located in forested biomes. Compared to developed lands, UTC was more persistent in protected open spaces. Some neighborhoods experienced substantial UTC gains, including quasi-suburban areas and depopulated low-income communities; the latter also experienced decreasing building cover. We identified key processes that drove UTC increases, and which imposed legacies on current UTC patterns: urban renewal, urban greening initiatives, quasi-suburban developments, and (dis)investments in parks. Our study demonstrates the socioecological dynamism of intra-city land cover changes at multi-decadal time scales and the crucial role of local historical context in the interpretation of UTC change.

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