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Ecosystem service delivery by urban agriculture and green infrastructure – a systematic review

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Ecosystem service delivery by urban agriculture and green infrastructure – a systematic review. / Evans, D.L.; Falagán, N.; Hardman, C.A. et al.
In: Ecosystem Services, Vol. 54, 101405, 30.04.2022.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Evans, D. L., Falagán, N., Hardman, C. A., Kourmpetli, S., Liu, L., Mead, B. R., & Davies, J. A. C. (2022). Ecosystem service delivery by urban agriculture and green infrastructure – a systematic review. Ecosystem Services, 54, Article 101405. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoser.2022.101405

Vancouver

Evans DL, Falagán N, Hardman CA, Kourmpetli S, Liu L, Mead BR et al. Ecosystem service delivery by urban agriculture and green infrastructure – a systematic review. Ecosystem Services. 2022 Apr 30;54:101405. Epub 2022 Feb 11. doi: 10.1016/j.ecoser.2022.101405

Author

Evans, D.L. ; Falagán, N. ; Hardman, C.A. et al. / Ecosystem service delivery by urban agriculture and green infrastructure – a systematic review. In: Ecosystem Services. 2022 ; Vol. 54.

Bibtex

@article{c6a499b2c920427a960eb5b9b2a55bf7,
title = "Ecosystem service delivery by urban agriculture and green infrastructure – a systematic review",
abstract = "The ability for urban ecosystems to deliver provisioning, regulating, cultural, and supporting services is vital for the health, sustainability, and resilience of urban environments. The increasing pressures being placed on urban environments by global climate change and the need to create sustainable food systems contributes to rising interest in green infrastructure and urban agriculture solutions. Yet, few studies have systematically assessed the ecosystem service provision of urban agriculture and green infrastructure in parallel. In this systematic review of 157 peer-reviewed journal articles, we synthesize the benefits and disbenefits of implementing various forms of urban agriculture and green infrastructure for the delivery of ecosystem services in urban areas. While both provide a diverse variety of ecosystem services, our review suggests that some services are provided more prevalently when green infrastructure is solely adopted (e.g., Local Climate and Air Quality Regulation), while other services are best delivered when green infrastructure is combined with urban agriculture (e.g., Biological Control and Maintenance of Genetic Diversity). Our data also show that ecosystem service delivery is partly modulated by the spaces in which urban growing takes place. Community Gardens, Green Spaces, Allotments, and Parks are found to be most conducive for diverse service provision, although it is also clear that some growing spaces have not been studied as frequently in urban ecosystem service research. We conclude by highlighting some key research gaps and priorities for urban ecosystem service research, including a stronger focus on under-represented services and growing spaces, the need for more systematic data collection, and the value of incorporating ecosystem service assessments into wider suitability and cost-benefit analyses. ",
keywords = "Ecosystem services, Green infrastructure, Growing space, Urban agriculture",
author = "D.L. Evans and N. Falag{\'a}n and C.A. Hardman and S. Kourmpetli and L. Liu and B.R. Mead and J.A.C. Davies",
year = "2022",
month = apr,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1016/j.ecoser.2022.101405",
language = "English",
volume = "54",
journal = "Ecosystem Services",
issn = "2212-0416",
publisher = "Elsevier Science B.V.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Ecosystem service delivery by urban agriculture and green infrastructure – a systematic review

AU - Evans, D.L.

AU - Falagán, N.

AU - Hardman, C.A.

AU - Kourmpetli, S.

AU - Liu, L.

AU - Mead, B.R.

AU - Davies, J.A.C.

PY - 2022/4/30

Y1 - 2022/4/30

N2 - The ability for urban ecosystems to deliver provisioning, regulating, cultural, and supporting services is vital for the health, sustainability, and resilience of urban environments. The increasing pressures being placed on urban environments by global climate change and the need to create sustainable food systems contributes to rising interest in green infrastructure and urban agriculture solutions. Yet, few studies have systematically assessed the ecosystem service provision of urban agriculture and green infrastructure in parallel. In this systematic review of 157 peer-reviewed journal articles, we synthesize the benefits and disbenefits of implementing various forms of urban agriculture and green infrastructure for the delivery of ecosystem services in urban areas. While both provide a diverse variety of ecosystem services, our review suggests that some services are provided more prevalently when green infrastructure is solely adopted (e.g., Local Climate and Air Quality Regulation), while other services are best delivered when green infrastructure is combined with urban agriculture (e.g., Biological Control and Maintenance of Genetic Diversity). Our data also show that ecosystem service delivery is partly modulated by the spaces in which urban growing takes place. Community Gardens, Green Spaces, Allotments, and Parks are found to be most conducive for diverse service provision, although it is also clear that some growing spaces have not been studied as frequently in urban ecosystem service research. We conclude by highlighting some key research gaps and priorities for urban ecosystem service research, including a stronger focus on under-represented services and growing spaces, the need for more systematic data collection, and the value of incorporating ecosystem service assessments into wider suitability and cost-benefit analyses.

AB - The ability for urban ecosystems to deliver provisioning, regulating, cultural, and supporting services is vital for the health, sustainability, and resilience of urban environments. The increasing pressures being placed on urban environments by global climate change and the need to create sustainable food systems contributes to rising interest in green infrastructure and urban agriculture solutions. Yet, few studies have systematically assessed the ecosystem service provision of urban agriculture and green infrastructure in parallel. In this systematic review of 157 peer-reviewed journal articles, we synthesize the benefits and disbenefits of implementing various forms of urban agriculture and green infrastructure for the delivery of ecosystem services in urban areas. While both provide a diverse variety of ecosystem services, our review suggests that some services are provided more prevalently when green infrastructure is solely adopted (e.g., Local Climate and Air Quality Regulation), while other services are best delivered when green infrastructure is combined with urban agriculture (e.g., Biological Control and Maintenance of Genetic Diversity). Our data also show that ecosystem service delivery is partly modulated by the spaces in which urban growing takes place. Community Gardens, Green Spaces, Allotments, and Parks are found to be most conducive for diverse service provision, although it is also clear that some growing spaces have not been studied as frequently in urban ecosystem service research. We conclude by highlighting some key research gaps and priorities for urban ecosystem service research, including a stronger focus on under-represented services and growing spaces, the need for more systematic data collection, and the value of incorporating ecosystem service assessments into wider suitability and cost-benefit analyses.

KW - Ecosystem services

KW - Green infrastructure

KW - Growing space

KW - Urban agriculture

U2 - 10.1016/j.ecoser.2022.101405

DO - 10.1016/j.ecoser.2022.101405

M3 - Journal article

VL - 54

JO - Ecosystem Services

JF - Ecosystem Services

SN - 2212-0416

M1 - 101405

ER -