The impact of projected increases in urbanization on ecosystem services
Top Cited Papers
- 9 March 2011
- journal article
- Published by The Royal Society in Proceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 278 (1722), 3201-3208
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2010.2754
Abstract
Alteration in land use is likely to be a major driver of changes in the distribution of ecosystem services before 2050. In Europe, urbanization will probably be the main cause of land-use change. This increase in urbanization will result in spatial shifts in both supplies of ecosystem services and the beneficiaries of those services; the net outcome of such shifts remains to be determined. Here, we model changes in urban land cover in Britain based on large (16%) projected increases in the human population by 2031, and the consequences for three different services--flood mitigation, agricultural production and carbon storage. We show that under a scenario of densification of urban areas, the combined effect of increasing population and loss of permeable surfaces is likely to result in 1.7 million people living within 1 km of rivers with at least 10 per cent increases in projected peak flows, but that increasing suburban 'sprawl' will have little effect on flood mitigation services. Conversely, losses of stored carbon and agricultural production are over three times as high under the sprawl as under the 'densification' urban growth scenarios. Our results illustrate the challenges of meeting, but also of predicting, future demands and patterns of ecosystem services in the face of increasing urbanization.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Land use change in BritainLand Use Policy, 2009
- Understanding relationships among multiple ecosystem servicesEcology Letters, 2009
- Use of soil data in a grid-based hydrological model to estimate spatial variation in changing flood risk across the UKJournal of Hydrology, 2009
- Spatial covariance between biodiversity and other ecosystem service prioritiesJournal of Applied Ecology, 2009
- Housing Supply and Brownfield Regeneration in a post-Barker World: Is There Enough Brownfield Land in England and Scotland?Urban Studies, 2008
- The Nature and Value of Ecosystem Services: An Overview Highlighting Hydrologic ServicesAnnual Review of Environment and Resources, 2007
- Urban transformation of river landscapes in a global contextGeomorphology, 2006
- Scenarios of Future Urban Land Use in EuropeEnvironment and Planning B: Planning and Design, 2006
- Changes in Nature's Balance Sheet: Model-based Estimates of Future Worldwide Ecosystem ServicesEcology and Society, 2005
- Seasonal and successional streamflow response to forest cutting and regrowth in the northwest and eastern United StatesWater Resources Research, 2004