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Erschienen in: Environmental Management 1/2016

19.04.2016

Beyond Impervious: Urban Land-Cover Pattern Variation and Implications for Watershed Management

verfasst von: Scott M. Beck, Melissa R. McHale, George R. Hess

Erschienen in: Environmental Management | Ausgabe 1/2016

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Abstract

Impervious surfaces degrade urban water quality, but their over-coverage has not explained the persistent water quality variation observed among catchments with similar rates of imperviousness. Land-cover patterns likely explain much of this variation, although little is known about how they vary among watersheds. Our goal was to analyze a series of urban catchments within a range of impervious cover to evaluate how land-cover varies among them. We then highlight examples from the literature to explore the potential effects of land-cover pattern variability for urban watershed management. High-resolution (1 m2) land-cover data were used to quantify 23 land-cover pattern and stormwater infrastructure metrics within 32 catchments across the Triangle Region of North Carolina. These metrics were used to analyze variability in land-cover patterns among the study catchments. We used hierarchical clustering to organize the catchments into four groups, each with a distinct landscape pattern. Among these groups, the connectivity of combined land-cover patches accounted for 40 %, and the size and shape of lawns and buildings accounted for 20 %, of the overall variation in land-cover patterns among catchments. Storm water infrastructure metrics accounted for 8 % of the remaining variation. Our analysis demonstrates that land-cover patterns do vary among urban catchments, and that trees and grass (lawns) are divergent cover types in urban systems. The complex interactions among land-covers have several direct implications for the ongoing management of urban watersheds.

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Metadaten
Titel
Beyond Impervious: Urban Land-Cover Pattern Variation and Implications for Watershed Management
verfasst von
Scott M. Beck
Melissa R. McHale
George R. Hess
Publikationsdatum
19.04.2016
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Environmental Management / Ausgabe 1/2016
Print ISSN: 0364-152X
Elektronische ISSN: 1432-1009
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00267-016-0700-8

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