scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Ecosystem services and urban heat riskscape moderation: water, green spaces, and social inequality in Phoenix, USA

TLDR
The results suggest the need for a systems evaluation of the benefits, costs, spatial structure, and temporal trajectory for the use of ecosystem services to moderate climate extremes.
Abstract
Urban ecosystems are subjected to high temperatures—extreme heat events, chronically hot weather, or both—through interactions between local and global climate processes. Urban vegetation may provide a cooling ecosystem service, although many knowledge gaps exist in the biophysical and social dynamics of using this service to reduce climate extremes. To better understand patterns of urban vegetated cooling, the potential water requirements to supply these services, and differential access to these services between residential neighborhoods, we evaluated three decades (1970–2000) of land surface characteristics and residential segregation by income in the Phoenix, Arizona, USA metropolitan region. We developed an ecosystem service trade-offs approach to assess the urban heat riskscape, defined as the spatial variation in risk exposure and potential human vulnerability to extreme heat. In this region, vegetation provided nearly a 25°C surface cooling compared to bare soil on low-humidity summer days; the ma...

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Microclimate Variation among Urban Land Covers: The Importance of Vertical and Horizontal Structure in Air and Land Surface Temperature Relationships

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated how land cover influences local distributions of LST, Ta, and relative humidity (RH) and their interactions and deployed 30 sensors at two heights above the ground (0.1 and 1.5 m) along with a thermal camera and an anemometer to quantify the influence of surface dynamics on atmospheric micrometeorological conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Response of wild bee communities to beekeeping, urbanization, and flower availability

TL;DR: It is concluded that cities can allow the coexistence of urban beekeeping and wild bees under moderate hive densities, and it will remain crucial to further investigate the competitive interactions between wild and honey bees to determine the threshold of hive density beyond which competition could occur.
Journal ArticleDOI

Environmental justice and surface temperature: Income, ethnic, gender, and age inequalities

TL;DR: In this article, the authors employed a semi-parametric geographically weighted regression model to study LST in Dutch residential zones in the summer of 2014, and the results of this study show that two national-scale inequalities are significant: overexposure of high-income groups and denoising of the owners of high value properties.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantifying Water and Energy Fluxes Over Different Urban Land Covers in Phoenix, Arizona

TL;DR: In this article, a mobile eddy covariance tower was deployed at three locations in Phoenix, Arizona, to sample the surface energy balance at a parking lot, a xeric landscaping (irrigated trees with gravel) and a mesic landscaping, with the irrigated turf grass exhibiting the highest evaporative fraction.
Book ChapterDOI

Double Exposure in the Sunbelt: The Sociospatial Distribution of Vulnerability in Phoenix, Arizona

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore how historic sociospatial and political economic processes produced the current landscape of environmental injustice in the urban core and led to suburban expansion and the foreclosure crisis and how predicted climate change in the West has begun to reconfigure existing patterns of environmental risk and security due to its effects on water resource availability.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Neighborhoods and Violent Crime: A Multilevel Study of Collective Efficacy

TL;DR: Multilevel analyses showed that a measure of collective efficacy yields a high between-neighborhood reliability and is negatively associated with variations in violence, when individual-level characteristics, measurement error, and prior violence are controlled.
Journal ArticleDOI

Toward a metabolic theory of ecology

TL;DR: This work has developed a quantitative theory for how metabolic rate varies with body size and temperature, and predicts how metabolic theory predicts how this rate controls ecological processes at all levels of organization from individuals to the biosphere.
Journal ArticleDOI

A soil-adjusted vegetation index (SAVI)

TL;DR: In this article, a transformation technique was presented to minimize soil brightness influences from spectral vegetation indices involving red and near-infrared (NIR) wavelengths, which nearly eliminated soil-induced variations in vegetation indices.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of regional climate change on human health

TL;DR: The growing evidence that climate–health relationships pose increasing health risks under future projections of climate change is reviewed and that the warming trend over recent decades has already contributed to increased morbidity and mortality in many regions of the world.
Journal ArticleDOI

Using the satellite-derived NDVI to assess ecological responses to environmental change

TL;DR: The use of the NDVI in recent ecological studies is reviewed and its possible key role in future research of environmental change in an ecosystem context is outlined.
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