Understanding the indirect impacts of urbanization on vegetation growth using the Continuum of Urbanity framework

Sci Total Environ. 2023 Nov 15:899:165693. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.165693. Epub 2023 Jul 20.

Abstract

Numerous studies investigated the direct impacts of urbanization on the loss and fragmentation of vegetated lands associated with urban expansion. Fewer studies, however, have examined the indirect impacts of urbanization on vegetation related to changes in livelihoods, lifestyles, and connectivity in non-urbanized areas, especially in the context of large-scale urban-rural migration. Here, we employ the Continuum of Urbanity framework to examine how changes in livelihoods, lifestyles, and connectivity in non-urbanized areas associated with urbanization affect vegetation, and thereby to understanding the indirect impacts of urbanization. We found there was a significant trend in human-induced EVI (HEVI) increase in non-urban areas, and such trend was coupled with decreased population density (PD) in forest land and grassland, but increased population density in cropland. The negative correlation between PD and HEVI became increasingly stronger from 2000 to 2011, but weakened since 2011. Livelihood income, lifestyles represented by consumption, and information connectivity to the outside world indirectly impacted HEVI by driving PD changes in non-urban areas. This indirect effect has shifted from positive to negative over the 20 years. These findings suggest that the indirect impacts of urbanization on vegetation growth are complicated and multifaceted, and understanding such impacts would be critically important to help turn urbanization into an opportunity for regional sustainable development.

Keywords: MODIS-EVI; Population migration; Remote sensing; Rural change; Urbanization.

MeSH terms

  • China
  • Cities
  • Environmental Monitoring*
  • Forests
  • Humans
  • Sustainable Development
  • Urbanization*