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UNIT 3 URBAN ECOLOGY Urban Ecology Structure 3.0 Introduction 3.1 Objectives 3.2 Concept of Urban Ecology 3.2.2 Sociological Understanding of Urban Ecology 3.3 Urban Ecosystems 3.4 Resource Ecology and Life - Supporting Resources 3.5 Economic Resources of the City 3.6 Integration of Human and Natural Environment 3.7 Challenges for Urban Ecology 3.8 Let Us Sum Up 3.9 Key Words 3.10 References and Suggested Readings 3.11 Answers to Check Your Progress 3.0 INTRODUCTION st Urbanization has become aunstopable global phenomena in 21 century leading to a number of changes in natural and social systems. As a result, urban ecosystems are expanding around the world as people migrate to cities and the human population continues to move from rural to urban setting. Now what happens to other species as these urban ecosystems expand, and how species live and interact in established urban ecosystems, is the central focus of urban ecology. Over the past two decades, urban ecology has rapidly expanded from simple studies evaluating what types of species are present in urban ecosystems to complex investigations of the characteristics that allow species to thrive in urban environments. According to the United Nations, the anticipated population growth between 2000 and 2030, approximately 2 billion people, will be concentrated in urban areas (UN 2004). By the year 2030 more than 60 per cent (4.9 billion) of the estimated world population (8.1 billion) will live in urban settlements, compared to 29 per cent in 1950. In 2025, more than a dozen urban agglomerations will have over 20 million inhabitants, and some will have over 30 million. 23 of the 25 biggest urban agglomerations on the planet will be in Africa, Asia, and Latin America, rather than in Europe or North America (Kraas 2003). These megacities are considered ‘hotspots’ of global change (Kraas 2007). Urbanised areas cover between approximately one and six per cent of Earth’s surface, yet they have extraordinarily large ecological ‘footprints’ and complex, powerful, and often indirect effects on ecosystems (Rees & Wackernagel, 1994 in Endlicher et al. 2007). 39 Introduction to Urban 3.1 OBJECTIVES Environment After reading this unit, you will be able to Define urban ecology • • Describe urban ecosystems and their importance • Elucidate the challenges of managing life support resources in urban environment 3.2 CONCEPT OF URBAN ECOLOGY The term ecology is basically from natural sciences which addresses the issues relating to biological patterns and environmental processes in any natural setting, whether be forests, agricultural system, rural human settlement or be urban. There are two ways in which scientific research and studies have been conducted on the issues of urban ecology. The first one focuses more on the biological and ecological processes and is led by the natural sciences group, where more emphasis is laid on the relationships between plant kingdom and animal kingdom and their relationships to environmental factors. The second way of defining urban ecology is more human centric or anthropocentric perspective, which is based on multidisciplinary approach keeping human being first in improving quality of life and living conditions for humans in urban areas. Broadly, focusing on urban development issues and habitats and challenges arising in urban ecosystems. As both `ecology' and `urban' have several meanings, `urban ecology' is a diverse and complex concept with dierent dimensions. For instance, the North American and European use of `urban ecology' dier. In Europe, urban ecological research has traditionally focused on the biota, especially fora, of urban areas, while North American research has been oriented towards social sciences (Wittig and Sukopp 1993). On the other hand, the North American urban ecological research has also included ecosystem fuxes and processes (Pickett et al. 1997). These di erent approaches to urban ecological research indicate that urban ecology is a broad discipline, and it can be de®ned as ecological research in the urban setting (Rebele, 1994). In addition to a scienti®c component, urban ecological studies usually aim at explicit applications of research in the planning and management of urban green areas (Wittig and Sukopp 1993). Thus, urban ecology is by nature an applied science. In other words, urban ecology is more seen and understood as application of methods and concepts of the biological science of ecology to urban areas, which also requires and integrates the concerns, concepts, and approaches of social sciences to produce a hybrid discipline. Urban ecological systems include individual organisms, populations, communities, and landscapes, as 40 well as buildings and infrastructure. Urban ecology further recognizes specific urban ecosystems as a part of the global biogeochemical, economic, Urban Ecology and human demographic..... (Pickett and Cadenasso, 2012). From an even broader view, urban ecology is the study of ecosystems that includes humans living in cities and urbanising landscapes. It investigates ecosystem services which are closely linked to patterns of urban development (Alberti 2005). Thus, Urban ecology is an interdisciplinary field that supports societies’ attempts to become more sustainable. It has deep roots in many disciplines including geography, sociology, urban planning, landscape architecture, engineering, economics, anthropology, climatology, public health, and ecology. Because of its interdisciplinary nature and unique focus on humans and natural systems within urbanised areas, ‘urban ecology’ has been used variously to describe the study of humans in cities, nature in cities, and the coupled relationships of humans and nature (Endlicher.,et al. 2007). 3.2.2. Sociological Understanding of Urban Ecology Human Ecology has evolved an important area of study, where human being and society is the focal point of concern, and central theme where all enquirys are made keeping society as the actor and factor in interaction with other components of ecology. It is also regarded as a social science paradigm that seeks to understand the relationship between human organization and its environment, both in terms of physical setting and sustenance. The study of urban ecology is an interdisciplinary approach which is based on components from some of the established disciplines of sociology, anthropology, political science, demography, geography and economics. And at various times, human urban ecology has been more or less connected to biological ecology. Among its major topics, urban ecology is concerned with the patterns of urban community sorting and change by socioeconomic status, life cycle, and ethnicity, and with patterns of relations across systems of cities. 3.3 URBAN ECOSYSTEMS Urban ecosystems can be understood as an ecosystems located in an urban settings, it is in noway different from any other ecosystems except for its location. Urban ecosystems are composed of biological components like plants, animals, and other forms of life and physical components like soil, water, air, climate and topography. In all ecosystems these components interact with one another within a specified area. In the case of urban ecosystems, however, the biological complex also includes human populations, their demographic characteristics, their institutional structures, and the social and economic tools they employ. But, unlike natural ecosystems, urban ecosystems are a hybrid of natural and man-made elements whose interactions are affected not only by the natural environment, but also culture, personal behaviour, politics, economics and social organisation. Urban ecosystems can no longer be considered as a separate entity to the environment as they have direct and indirect impacts on the immediate and wider environments. Many of the environmental problems 41 Introduction to Urban faced today (eg global warming, water and air pollution and inadequate Environment access to safe drinking water) can be traced back to cities and lifestyle choices. According to Encyclopedia Britanica (2020), urban ecosystems also include physical complex like buildings, transportation networks, modified surfaces (e.g., parking lots, roofs, and landscaping), and the environmental alterations resulting from human decision making. The physical components of urban ecosystems also include energy use and the import, transformation, and export of materials. Such energy and material transformations involve not only beneficial products (such as transportation and housing) but also pollution, wastes, and excess heat. Urban ecosystems are often warmer than other ecosystems that surround them, have less infiltration of rainwater into the local soil, and show higher rates and amounts of surface runoff after rain and storms. Urban areas can not exist in isolation. They require inputs from, and waste assimilation functions of, other ecosystems. Ecological footprint analysis has shown that many cities require a productive land and sea area several times the city's size in order to support the population. The urban ecosystem contains both individual and layered (nested) systems from three spheres: (a) the natural environment, (b) the built environment and (c) the socio- economic environment. In order to develop policies and programs that advance sustainable development and the equitable allocation of resources, each system within the urban ecosystem needs to be recognized as a living entity that constantly changes with time, location interventions. This differentiates urban ecosystem from the typical segregated and static management approach of ecosystems in its natural condition. Each components of urban ecosystems require a dynamic balancing and integration. In addition, the interdependencies and interactions between each system and between the urban ecosystem as a whole and other ecosystems need to be understood. Unhealthy urban ecosystems can lead to local and wider environmental degradation, social problems, economic decline, human health problems and further disconnection from nature. (https://www.gdrc.org/sustdevHYPERLINK "https://www.gdrc.org/sustdev/concepts/23-u-eco.html"/concepts/23-u- eco.html). It is well known that there are many differences between urban ecosystems and other ecosystems less dominated by humans. Urban ecosystems are generally highly disturbed systems, subject to rapid changes in soil and plant cover, as well as temperature and water availability. Buildings, roads, parking lots, shopping and residential constructions have covered the open land space with concrete to form a largely impenetrable covering of the soil that affects the flow of water and soil permeability for water getting into the land. The plant life in urban ecosystems is also very different from plants in any natural ecosystem, characterized by many alien species introduction and non- 42
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