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      Urbanisation drivers and underlying mechanisms of terrestrial insect diversity loss in cities

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          Global change and the ecology of cities.

          Urban areas are hot spots that drive environmental change at multiple scales. Material demands of production and human consumption alter land use and cover, biodiversity, and hydrosystems locally to regionally, and urban waste discharge affects local to global biogeochemical cycles and climate. For urbanites, however, global environmental changes are swamped by dramatic changes in the local environment. Urban ecology integrates natural and social sciences to study these radically altered local environments and their regional and global effects. Cities themselves present both the problems and solutions to sustainability challenges of an increasingly urbanized world.
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            Worldwide decline of the entomofauna: A review of its drivers

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              Is Open Access

              A Meta-Analysis of Global Urban Land Expansion

              The conversion of Earth's land surface to urban uses is one of the most irreversible human impacts on the global biosphere. It drives the loss of farmland, affects local climate, fragments habitats, and threatens biodiversity. Here we present a meta-analysis of 326 studies that have used remotely sensed images to map urban land conversion. We report a worldwide observed increase in urban land area of 58,000 km2 from 1970 to 2000. India, China, and Africa have experienced the highest rates of urban land expansion, and the largest change in total urban extent has occurred in North America. Across all regions and for all three decades, urban land expansion rates are higher than or equal to urban population growth rates, suggesting that urban growth is becoming more expansive than compact. Annual growth in GDP per capita drives approximately half of the observed urban land expansion in China but only moderately affects urban expansion in India and Africa, where urban land expansion is driven more by urban population growth. In high income countries, rates of urban land expansion are slower and increasingly related to GDP growth. However, in North America, population growth contributes more to urban expansion than it does in Europe. Much of the observed variation in urban expansion was not captured by either population, GDP, or other variables in the model. This suggests that contemporary urban expansion is related to a variety of factors difficult to observe comprehensively at the global level, including international capital flows, the informal economy, land use policy, and generalized transport costs. Using the results from the global model, we develop forecasts for new urban land cover using SRES Scenarios. Our results show that by 2030, global urban land cover will increase between 430,000 km2 and 12,568,000 km2, with an estimate of 1,527,000 km2 more likely.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Ecological Entomology
                Ecol Entomol
                Wiley
                0307-6946
                1365-2311
                April 30 2021
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Instituto Multidisciplinario de Biología Vegetal (IMBIV) Universidad Nacional de Córdoba (UNC) – CONICET Córdoba Argentina
                [2 ]Department of Ecology, Faculty of Environmental Sciences Czech University of Life Sciences Prague Prague Suchdol Czech Republic
                [3 ]IES Landau, Institute for Environmental Sciences University of Koblenz‐Landau Landau Germany
                Article
                10.1111/een.13041
                525fbc12-481d-4225-abd6-8808a5dd82fa
                © 2021

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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