Urban Soils and Their Potential to Provide Ecosystem Services.
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Urbanization affects soils and their capacity to provide ecosystem services directly through physical disturbance and management (e.g., irrigation) and indirectly through changes in the environment (e.g., urban heat island effect and pollution). Whatever the case, soils in urban landscapes are generally thought of as highly disturbed and heterogeneous with little systematic pattern in their characteristics. As such, most studies have focused on human-constructed soils along streets and in highly impacted areas. As a result, “urban soils” have been viewed as drastically disturbed, low in fertility, and not providing many ecosystem services. However, observations of entire landscapes have shown that the chemical, physical, and biological response of soils to urbanization is complex and variable, such that soils that are largely undisturbed, of high fertility and function, also have been identified in urban areas.
See more from this Session: Keynote Address: Urban Soils and Their Potential to Provide Ecosystem Services