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Competition between biogeochemical drivers and land-cover changes determines urban greening or browning.

Authors :
Li, Long
Zhan, Wenfeng
Ju, Weimin
Peñuelas, Josep
Zhu, Zaichun
Peng, Shushi
Zhu, Xiaolin
Liu, Zihan
Zhou, Yuyu
Li, Jiufeng
Lai, Jiameng
Huang, Fan
Yin, Gaofei
Fu, Yongshuo
Li, Manchun
Yu, Chao
Source :
Remote Sensing of Environment. Mar2023, Vol. 287, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Urban vegetation, a harbinger of future global vegetation change, is controlled by complex urban environments. The urban-rural gradient in vegetation greenness trends and their responses to biogeochemical drivers (e.g. elevated atmospheric CO 2 concentration and climate warming) and land-cover changes, however, remain unclear. Here we used satellite-derived enhanced vegetation index to examine the greenness trends for 1500-plus cities in China for 2000–2019. We developed a conceptual framework to differentiate between the contributions of four key drivers to the greenness trends: two biogeochemical drivers, a background biogeochemical driver (BBD) and an urban biogeochemical driver (UBD), and two drivers of land-cover changes, urban expansion or densification (UED) and urban green recovery (UGR). We find that the greening trends gradually decreased from urban cores to urban new towns and then to browning trends in urban fringes. The significant greening in urban cores was mainly contributed by BBD (25.6%) and UBD (52.3%). While the minor greening in urban new towns was contributed by both BBD (33.1%) and UBD (24.1%) and weakened by UED (−39.7%). The UED (−64.4%) dominated the browning in urban fringes. These results suggest that biogeochemical drivers and land-cover changes jointly regulated the urban-rural gradient in greenness trends, which contributes to the assessment of future global vegetation change driven by complex environmental changes. • The urban-rural gradient in greenness trends and its drivers were analyzed. • The urban-rural gradient in greenness trends is vividly featured by a 'V-shape'. • Biogeochemical drivers and land-cover changes jointly regulate the 'V-shape'. • Urban biogeochemical drivers lead to the significant greening in urban cores. • Urban expansion or densification dominates the browning in urban fringes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00344257
Volume :
287
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Remote Sensing of Environment
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
161902982
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rse.2023.113481