Aligning urban forest management actions with urban sustainability goals: A multi‐city expert elicitation

Abstract City leaders are setting ambitious plans to achieve critical urban sustainability goals such as reducing urban heat, mitigating flooding during storms, and conserving biodiversity, and increasingly rely on urban forests as a key nature‐based solution to such challenges. Current paradigms of...

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Main Authors: Corinne G. Bassett, Susan D. Day, Cecil C. Konijnendijk, Lara A. Roman, Victoria Hemming
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2024-12-01
Series:Ecosphere
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.70120
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author Corinne G. Bassett
Susan D. Day
Cecil C. Konijnendijk
Lara A. Roman
Victoria Hemming
author_facet Corinne G. Bassett
Susan D. Day
Cecil C. Konijnendijk
Lara A. Roman
Victoria Hemming
author_sort Corinne G. Bassett
collection DOAJ
description Abstract City leaders are setting ambitious plans to achieve critical urban sustainability goals such as reducing urban heat, mitigating flooding during storms, and conserving biodiversity, and increasingly rely on urban forests as a key nature‐based solution to such challenges. Current paradigms of urban forest management typically prioritize goals like increasing tree canopy cover that are often viewed as proxies for increased ecosystem service provision, in a general sense. However, urban foresters, the professionals with responsibility to manage urban forests, are increasingly faced with the complex challenge of managing for new goals related to ecosystem services, biodiversity, or people–nature relationships, as cities increasingly set goals centered on such outcomes, without robust guidelines to follow. We ask: How can urban foresters align their street tree management actions with specific urban sustainability goals? We conducted a structured expert elicitation of urban forest professionals in three cities: Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada; Honolulu, Hawaiʻi, United States; and Washington, DC, United States. A socio‐ecological lens was used to examine urban foresters as agents of change in urban ecosystems. Participants assessed the impacts of 40 direct management actions on five goals: (1) canopy cover increase and tree risk reduction, (2) urban heat reduction, (3) people–nature relationships, (4) wildlife habitat, and (5) stormwater interception and infiltration. While certain actions (e.g., in the mature tree maintenance phase) were selected as needed to advance every goal, experts identified numerous actions which aligned with one or several goals, but not all. Preplanting actions, specifically site selection and species selection, presented the greatest opportunities to advance specific goals, suggesting that aligning this phase with city sustainability goals is critical. Participants were highly confident in being able to advance all goals through street tree management, but were more confident in being able to advance the goals of increasing canopy cover while reducing tree risk and of mitigating urban heat, possibly because these goals more closely align with traditional canopy cover goal setting. This research underscores the necessity of considering site‐level ecosystem management actions to advance strategic sustainability goals, while also revealing the complexity of the role and responsibilities of professionals who manage urban ecosystems.
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spelling doaj-art-701792333c0b441dbb6f8a9f169ff66e2025-01-27T14:51:34ZengWileyEcosphere2150-89252024-12-011512n/an/a10.1002/ecs2.70120Aligning urban forest management actions with urban sustainability goals: A multi‐city expert elicitationCorinne G. Bassett0Susan D. Day1Cecil C. Konijnendijk2Lara A. Roman3Victoria Hemming4Faculty of Forestry University of British Columbia Vancouver British Columbia CanadaFaculty of Forestry University of British Columbia Vancouver British Columbia CanadaFaculty of Forestry University of British Columbia Vancouver British Columbia CanadaUSDA Pacific Southwest Research Station Riverside California USAFaculty of Forestry University of British Columbia Vancouver British Columbia CanadaAbstract City leaders are setting ambitious plans to achieve critical urban sustainability goals such as reducing urban heat, mitigating flooding during storms, and conserving biodiversity, and increasingly rely on urban forests as a key nature‐based solution to such challenges. Current paradigms of urban forest management typically prioritize goals like increasing tree canopy cover that are often viewed as proxies for increased ecosystem service provision, in a general sense. However, urban foresters, the professionals with responsibility to manage urban forests, are increasingly faced with the complex challenge of managing for new goals related to ecosystem services, biodiversity, or people–nature relationships, as cities increasingly set goals centered on such outcomes, without robust guidelines to follow. We ask: How can urban foresters align their street tree management actions with specific urban sustainability goals? We conducted a structured expert elicitation of urban forest professionals in three cities: Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada; Honolulu, Hawaiʻi, United States; and Washington, DC, United States. A socio‐ecological lens was used to examine urban foresters as agents of change in urban ecosystems. Participants assessed the impacts of 40 direct management actions on five goals: (1) canopy cover increase and tree risk reduction, (2) urban heat reduction, (3) people–nature relationships, (4) wildlife habitat, and (5) stormwater interception and infiltration. While certain actions (e.g., in the mature tree maintenance phase) were selected as needed to advance every goal, experts identified numerous actions which aligned with one or several goals, but not all. Preplanting actions, specifically site selection and species selection, presented the greatest opportunities to advance specific goals, suggesting that aligning this phase with city sustainability goals is critical. Participants were highly confident in being able to advance all goals through street tree management, but were more confident in being able to advance the goals of increasing canopy cover while reducing tree risk and of mitigating urban heat, possibly because these goals more closely align with traditional canopy cover goal setting. This research underscores the necessity of considering site‐level ecosystem management actions to advance strategic sustainability goals, while also revealing the complexity of the role and responsibilities of professionals who manage urban ecosystems.https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.70120decision scienceecosystem managementmultiobjective managementparticipatory researchtree plantingurban ecology
spellingShingle Corinne G. Bassett
Susan D. Day
Cecil C. Konijnendijk
Lara A. Roman
Victoria Hemming
Aligning urban forest management actions with urban sustainability goals: A multi‐city expert elicitation
Ecosphere
decision science
ecosystem management
multiobjective management
participatory research
tree planting
urban ecology
title Aligning urban forest management actions with urban sustainability goals: A multi‐city expert elicitation
title_full Aligning urban forest management actions with urban sustainability goals: A multi‐city expert elicitation
title_fullStr Aligning urban forest management actions with urban sustainability goals: A multi‐city expert elicitation
title_full_unstemmed Aligning urban forest management actions with urban sustainability goals: A multi‐city expert elicitation
title_short Aligning urban forest management actions with urban sustainability goals: A multi‐city expert elicitation
title_sort aligning urban forest management actions with urban sustainability goals a multi city expert elicitation
topic decision science
ecosystem management
multiobjective management
participatory research
tree planting
urban ecology
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.70120
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