2019
DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/ab2552
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Defining and assessing urban forests to inform management and policy

Abstract: The context in which trees and forests grow in cities is highly variable and influences the provision of ecological, social, and economic benefits. Understanding the spatial extent, structure, and composition of forests is necessary to guide urban forest policy and management, yet current forest assessment methodologies vary widely in scale, sampling intensity, and focus. Current definitions of the urban forest include all trees growing in the urban environment, and have been translated to the design of urban … Show more

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Cited by 36 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…An urban forest patch does not include street, yard, and landscaped park treesbeneath which regeneration is discouraged through direct management practicesalthough nearby trees in these contexts may deposit seeds into a forest patch. Our definition includes both wild woodlands as defined by Kowarik and Körner (2005) and Konijnendijk (2005) as well as forests of diverse cultural origins originally planted by people, and aligns with the broad definition of a natural area forest applied by Pregitzer et al (2019) to suggest the need for collective, rather than individual tree management.…”
Section: What Is An Urban Forest Patch?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An urban forest patch does not include street, yard, and landscaped park treesbeneath which regeneration is discouraged through direct management practicesalthough nearby trees in these contexts may deposit seeds into a forest patch. Our definition includes both wild woodlands as defined by Kowarik and Körner (2005) and Konijnendijk (2005) as well as forests of diverse cultural origins originally planted by people, and aligns with the broad definition of a natural area forest applied by Pregitzer et al (2019) to suggest the need for collective, rather than individual tree management.…”
Section: What Is An Urban Forest Patch?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, these estimates depend on accurate characterization of tree species, size, density, and growing conditions associated with urban tree canopies. Tree density, basal area and biomass vary markedly among tree canopy types in cities, especially between designed and natural area ecosystems (Pregitzer et al 2019b).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many cities have begun to use i-Tree Eco and urban Forest Inventory and Analysis (FIA), two plot-based sampling methods, to assess the urban forest at the city scale and provide information about trees across all urban cover types. Although useful for raising public awareness about trees in the city, these sampling approaches are not necessarily effective for characterizing forested natural areas (Pregitzer et al 2019b), or prescribing community-or stand-specific management strategies. Traditional forest inventory sampling strategies often focus on stratifying areas of interest by forest type, stand age, and size class, providing quantitative information for targeted forest management strategies.…”
Section: What Do You Have? Urban Forest Assessmentmentioning
confidence: 99%