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Discovering and Applying the Urban Rules of Life to Design Sustainable and Healthy Cities

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TLDR
In this article, the authors propose to apply what they have learned to engage residents of the urban biome, and design cities that are more biologically diverse, are provided with more and better ecosystem services, and are more equitable and healthier places to live.
Abstract
The city and its urban biome provides an extreme laboratory for studying fundamental biological questions and developing best practices for sustaining biodiverse and well-functioning ecological communities within anthropogenic built environments. We propose by studying urban organisms, urban biotic communities, the urban biome, and the interactions between the urban biome and peri-urban built and natural environments, we can (1) discover new "rules of life" for the structure, function, interaction, and evolution of organisms; (2) use these discoveries to understand how novel emerging biotic communities affect and are affected by anthropogenic environmental changes in climate and other environmental factors; and (3) apply what we have learned to engage residents of the urban biome, and design cities that are more biologically diverse, are provided with more and better ecosystem services, and are more equitable and healthier places to live. The built environment of the urban biome is a place that reflects history, economics, technology, governance, culture, and values of the human residents; research on and applications of the rules of life in the urban biome can be used by all residents in making choices about the design of the cities where they live. Because inhabitants are directly invested in the environmental quality of their neighborhoods, research conducted in and about the urban environment provides a great opportunity to engage wide and diverse communities of people. Given the opportunity to engage a broad constituency-from basic researchers to teachers, civil engineers, landscape planners, and concerned citizens-studying the translation of the rules of life onto the urban environment will result in an integrative and cross-cutting set of questions and hypotheses, and will foster a dialog among citizens about the focus of urban biome research and its application toward making more equitable, healthy, livable, sustainable, and biodiverse cities.

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Citations
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Extending Our Scientific Reach in Arboreal Ecosystems for Research and Management

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify the strategies that would provide the benefits to a broad range of scientists, arborists, and professional climbers and facilitate basic discovery and applied management.
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Interactive effects of anthropogenic environmental drivers on endocrine responses in wildlife

TL;DR: This paper conducted a systematic review of the interactive effects of anthropogenic drivers on endocrine responses in non-human animals and suggested that incorporating endocrine response into Adverse Outcome Pathways would be beneficial to improve predictions of environmental effects.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Urban Landscape Genetics: Are Biologists Keeping Up with the Pace of Urbanization?

TL;DR: A review of urban landscape genetics research can be found in this paper, where the authors examine what types of urban features are quantified, what genetic measures are used, what species are studied, and in which geographic regions they are conducted.
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The luxury effect beyond cities: bats respond to socioeconomic variation across landscapes

TL;DR: Across landscapes, activity of the red bat and the evening bat was positively correlated to income independent of land cover, consistent with previous single-city results and demonstrated that the luxury effect is an ecological pattern that can be found at a broad spatial scale across different landscapes.
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Toward a bioarchaeology of urbanization: Demography, health, and behavior in cities in the past.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide an overview and examples of three main ways in which urbanization is studied in bioarchaeological research: comparison of (often contemporaneous) urban and rural sites, synchronic studies of the variation that exists within and between urban sites, and investigations of changes that occur within urban sites over time.
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Prioritizing the provision of urban ecosystem services in deprived areas, a question of environmental justice.

TL;DR: Air pollution removal, atmospheric carbon reduction, and surface runoff mitigation provided by urban trees in Strasbourg city (France) were quantified by creating an index of UES delivery, which was contrasted with a constructed social deprivation index.
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Trending Questions (1)
How can we improve urban design to create more sustainable and livable cities?

By studying urban organisms and biotic communities, we can discover new "rules of life" and apply them to design more sustainable and livable cities.