Ecological homogenization of urban USA


Autoria(s): Groffman, PM; Cavender-Bares, J; Bettez, ND; Grove, JM; Hall, SJ; Heffernan, JB; Hobbie, SE; Larson, KL; Morse, JL; Neill, C; Nelson, K; O'Neil-Dunne, J; Ogden, L; Pataki, DE; Polsky, C; Chowdhury, RR; Steele, MK
Data(s)

01/02/2014

Formato

74 - 81

Identificador

Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 2014, 12 (1), pp. 74 - 81

1540-9295

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/8394

1540-9309

Relação

Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment

10.1890/120374

Tipo

Journal Article

Resumo

A visually apparent but scientifically untested outcome of land-use change is homogenization across urban areas, where neighborhoods in different parts of the country have similar patterns of roads, residential lots, commercial areas, and aquatic features. We hypothesize that this homogenization extends to ecological structure and also to ecosystem functions such as carbon dynamics and microclimate, with continental-scale implications. Further, we suggest that understanding urban homogenization will provide the basis for understanding the impacts of urban land-use change from local to continental scales. Here, we show how multi-scale, multidisciplinary datasets from six metropolitan areas that cover the major climatic regions of the US (Phoenix, AZ; Miami, FL; Baltimore, MD; Boston, MA; Minneapolis-St Paul, MN; and Los Angeles, CA) can be used to determine how household and neighborhood characteristics correlate with land-management practices, land-cover composition, and landscape structure and ecosystem functions at local, regional, and continental scales. © The Ecological Society of America.