Environmental Research Letters (Jan 2013)

Urban vegetation and income segregation in drylands: a synthesis of seven metropolitan regions in the southwestern United States

  • G Darrel Jenerette,
  • Greg Miller,
  • Alexander Buyantuev,
  • Diane E Pataki,
  • Thomas W Gillespie,
  • Stephanie Pincetl

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/8/4/044001
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 4
p. 044001

Abstract

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To better understand how urbanization affects the amount and timing of urban vegetation in drylands we investigated remotely sensed vegetation patterns across seven large metropolitan regions in the southwestern United States. We asked (1) how low density urban land cover differed from adjacent wildland grass, herb, and shrub land covers in both the amount of vegetation and the length of the growing season, (2) how neighborhood income affected patterns of vegetation within low density urban cover, and (3) how cities differed from one another in their vegetation patterns. We found that urbanization generally has a strong influence on vegetation compared to adjacent wildlands. In four of the metropolitan regions the cumulative enhanced vegetation index (EVI) and growing season length in low density developments were higher than grass, herb, and shrub land covers. Within all metropolitan regions, there was a significant socioeconomic effect where higher income areas had a higher cumulative EVI than lower income areas. The large differences in urban vegetation among cities were related to precipitation and total domestic water use. These findings help to identify how urbanization influences vegetation, with implications for the availability of ecosystem services and requirements for irrigation in hot dryland cities.

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