Planning for the future of urban biodiversity: A global review of city-scale initiatives

Abstract

Cities represent considerable opportunities for forwarding global biodiversity and sustainability goals. We developed key attributes for conserving biodiversity and for ecosystem services that should be included in urban-planning documents and reviewed 135 plans from 40 cities globally. The most common attributes in city plans were goals for habitat conservation, air and water quality, cultural ecosystem services, and ecological connectivity. Few plans included quantitative targets. This lack of measurable targets may render plans unsuccessful for an actionable approach to local biodiversity conservation. Although most cities include both biodiversity and ecosystem services, each city tends to focus on one or the other. Comprehensive planning for biodiversity should include the full range of attributes identified, but few cities do this, and the majority that do are mandated by local, regional, or federal governments to plan specifically for biodiversity conservation. This research provides planning recommendations for protecting urban biodiversity based on ecological knowledge.

Publication Type
Journal Article
Authors
Charles H. Nilon
Myla F.J. Aronson
Sarel S. Cilliers
Cynnamon Dobbs, Universidad Mayor de Chile
Lauren J. Frazee
Mark A. Goddard
Karen M. O'Neill
Debra Roberts, eThekwini Municipality
Emilie K. Stander
Peter Werner, Institute for Housing and Environment, Germany
Marten Winter, iDiv
Ken P. Yocom
Date
Journal
BioScience
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