“…Although these maps are static depictions of urban areas largely dependent on the input data sources (e.g., remote sensing, nighttime lights, census data), they have shown the potential for largearea maps of urban extent/expansion for a large number of applications, including: assessment of arable land (Tan et al, 2005;Avellan et al, 2012), water quality/availability (McDonald et al, 2011), natural resources (Lambin &,Meyfroidt, 2011), habitat loss (Radeloff et al, 2005) and biodiversity (Guneralp et al, 2013); air pollution monitoring and associated impacts to human health (Grimm et al, 2008;Cassiani et al, 2013); and regionalglobal modeling of climate (Oleson et al, 2008), hydrological (McGrane et al, 2014), and biogeochemical cycles (Nordbo et al, 2012;Zhao et al, 2013). At the same time, these maps have proven vital for investigating socio-economic issues such as population distribution (Jones et al, 2013), spatial patterns of disease risk (Tatem et al, 2007;Wilhelmi et al, 2013), poverty (Elvidge et al, 2009), and economic growth (Chen & Nordhaus, 2011), and for planning and policy in developing-country cities that lack this information (Scott et al, 2013;Deuskar et al, 2014).…”