2018
DOI: 10.1002/eap.1819
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A city‐scale assessment reveals that native forest types and overstory species dominate New York City forests

Abstract: Cities are increasingly focused on expanding tree canopy cover as a means to improve the urban environment by, for example, reducing heat island effects, promoting better air quality, and protecting local habitat. The majority of efforts to expand canopy cover focus on planting street trees or on planting native tree species and removing nonnatives in natural areas through reforestation. Yet many urban canopy assessments conducted at the city‐scale reveal co‐dominance by nonnative trees, fueling debates about … Show more

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Cited by 49 publications
(44 citation statements)
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“…Comparing results from Berlin with other studies on successional forests suggests that cities in different biogeographic regions share some dominant tree species, including A. platanoides, R. pseudoacacia, and A. altissima, as shown for a Mediterranean city [45] and for temperate North American cities [13,46,64,83]. Whether the shared dominance of the same tree species in different cities will lead to a biotic homogenization of urban successional forests deserves further comparative studies on a global scale.…”
Section: Successional Forests At the Landscape Scalementioning
confidence: 64%
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“…Comparing results from Berlin with other studies on successional forests suggests that cities in different biogeographic regions share some dominant tree species, including A. platanoides, R. pseudoacacia, and A. altissima, as shown for a Mediterranean city [45] and for temperate North American cities [13,46,64,83]. Whether the shared dominance of the same tree species in different cities will lead to a biotic homogenization of urban successional forests deserves further comparative studies on a global scale.…”
Section: Successional Forests At the Landscape Scalementioning
confidence: 64%
“…Communities of these species have been described since the 1960s for Berlin and beyond [94,95], starting with studies on early successional stages on post-war rubble soils [137] and later covering a broader range of sites, e.g., within transportation corridors (see early synthesis in [40,82]. While many previous studies on urban successional forests largely relied on measures of abundance, e.g., [45,79,138], but see [46,64], our analysis adds insights into the relative importance of different tree species as dominants of successional forests in terms of covered area at the city scale.…”
Section: Successional Forests At the Landscape Scalementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Urban forest assessments are the basis upon which their benefits are quantified, policy is determined, and management is implemented (McPherson 1992, Brack 2002, Cowett and Bassuk 2017. However, methods for urban forest assessment vary markedly in scale and focus (Wilson et al 2004, Corona 2016, yielding contradictory conclusions about the status of forest biodiversity and invasive species (Pregitzer et al 2019). For cities to sustain and enhance urban forests, assessments that accurately characterize the urban forest to inform policy and management are needed.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, some of the larger urban forested natural areas include Seward Park (121 ha) in Seattle (US), Richmond Park (955 ha) in London (UK), Metropolitan Natural Park (232 ha) in Panama City (Panama), and Stanley Park (405 ha) in Vancouver (Canada). In New York City (US) forested natural areas are made up of mostly native tree species (82%) and are similar in structure to forest types found in rural areas of New York State (Pregitzer et al 2019). Although forest patches in cities vary in size, stand age, and species composition, trees in these stands experience the same ecological processes, and are often subject to the same management objectives as non-urban forests.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%