Human and Biophysical Legacies Shape Contemporary Urban Forests: A Literature Synthesis

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

4-2018

Keywords

Historical ecology, Legacy effect, Social-ecological system, Tree diversity, Urban ecology, Urban tree canopy

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ufug.2018.03.004

Abstract

Understanding how urban forests developed their current patterns of tree canopy cover, species composition, and diversity requires an appreciation of historical legacy effects. However, analyses of current urban forest characteristics are often limited to contemporary socioeconomic factors, overlooking the role of history. The institutions, human communities, and biophysical conditions of cities change over time, creating layers of legacies on the landscape, shifting urban forests through complex interactive processes and feedbacks. Urban green spaces and planted trees can persist long after their establishment, meaning that today’s mature canopy reflects conditions and decisions from many years prior. In this synthesis article, we discuss some of the major historical human and biophysical drivers and associated legacy effects expressed in present urban forest patterns, highlighting examples in the United States and Canada. The bioregional context – native biome, climate, topography, initial vegetation, and pre-urbanization land use – represents the initial conditions in which a city established and grew, and this context influences how legacy effects unfold. Human drivers of legacy effects can reflect specific historical periods: colonial histories related to the symbolism of certain species, and the urban parks and civic beautification movements. Other human drivers include phenomena that cut across time periods such as neighborhood urban form and socioeconomic change. Biophysical legacy effects include the consequences of past disturbances such as extreme weather events and pest and disease outbreaks. Urban tree professionals play a major role in many legacy effects by mediating the interactions and feedbacks between biophysical and human drivers. We emphasize the importance of historical perspectives to understand past drivers that have produced current urban forest patterns, and call for interdisciplinary and mixed methods research to unpack the mechanisms of long-term urban forest change at intra- and inter-city scales.

Comments

Complete list of authors: Adrina C. Bardekjian, John J. Battles, Mary L. Cadenasso, Cecil C. Konijnendijk van den Bosch, Meghan Avolio, Adam Berland, G. Darrel Jenerette, Sarah K. Mincey, Diane E. Pataki, Christina Staudhammer

Was this content written or created while at USF?

Yes

Citation / Publisher Attribution

Urban Forestry & Urban Greening, v. 31, p. 157-168

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