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The phenological response of European vegetation to urbanisation is mediated by macrobioclimatic factors. | LitMetric

The phenological response of European vegetation to urbanisation is mediated by macrobioclimatic factors.

Sci Total Environ

Department of Pharmacology, Pharmacognosy and Botany, Faculty of Pharmacy, Complutense University of Madrid, Madrid, Spain.

Published: December 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Plant phenology, or the study of seasonal biological events in plants, significantly impacts ecosystems and is influenced by human activities like urbanization.
  • This study used remote sensing to analyze how urbanization affects the phenological stages (start, length, and end of the growing season) of various vegetation types across major European cities from 2002 to 2021.
  • Findings indicate that urbanization generally leads to earlier starts and longer growing seasons for plants, particularly in Mediterranean areas, with climate factors playing a critical role in these changes.

Article Abstract

Plant phenology is a crucial component of ecosystem functioning and is affected by multiple elements of global change; we therefore need to quantify the current phenological changes associated to human activities and understand their impacts on ecosystems. Urbanisation and the intensification of anthropogenic activities alter meteorological conditions and cause phenological changes in urban vegetation worldwide. We used remote sensing data to evaluate the phenological response (start of season date SOS, length of season LOS and end of season date EOS) of five main vegetation types (evergreen forests, deciduous forests, mixed forests, sparse woody vegetation and grasslands) to urbanisation in the 69 most populated pan-European metropolitan areas (i.e., those that include cities with a population over 450,000 inhabitants) for the period 2002-2021. In general, SOS advanced and LOS increased with urbanisation intensity across European metropolitan areas. We found that macrobioclimatic factors strongly determined the strength and direction of the phenological response to urbanisation intensity. The greatest advances in SOS with increasing urbanisation were registered in metropolitan areas in the Mediterranean region, where there was also more uncertainty in this relationship. The EOS advanced with urbanisation in metropolitan areas in the Mediterranean macrobioclimate, whereas in areas with higher precipitation during summer the opposite trend was observed suggesting water availability mediates the response between urbanisation and autumn phenophases. Our results suggest that macrobioclimatic constraints operating at the continental scale are crucial to understand the relationship between plant phenology and urbanisation intensity.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.167092DOI Listing

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