Abstract

Vegetation phenology manifests the rhythm of annual plant life activities. It has been extensively studied in natural ecosystems. However, major knowledge gaps still exist in understanding the impacts of urbanization on vegetation phenology. This study addresses two questions to fill the knowledge gaps: (1) How does vegetation phenology vary spatially and temporally along a rural-to-urban transect in Shanghai, China, over the past three decades? (2) How do landscape composition and configuration affect those variations of vegetation phenology? To answer these questions, 30 m × 30 m mean vegetation phenology metrics, including the start of growing season (SOS), end of growing season (EOS), and length of growing season (LOS), were derived for urban vegetation using dense stacks of enhanced vegetation index (EVI) time series from images collected by Landsat 5–8 satellites from 1984 to 2015. Landscape pattern metrics were calculated using high spatial resolution aerial photos. We then used Pearson correlation analysis to quantify the associations between phenology patterns and landscape metrics. We found that vegetation in urban centers experienced advances of SOS for 5–10 days and delays of EOS for 5–11 days compared with those located in the surrounding rural areas. Additionally, we observed strong positive correlations between landscape composition (percentage of landscape area) of developed land and LOS of urban vegetation. We also found that the landscape configuration of local land cover types, especially patch density and edge density, was significantly correlated with the spatial patterns of vegetation phenology. These results demonstrate that vegetation phenology in the urban area is significantly different from its rural surroundings. These findings have implications for urban environmental management, ranging from biodiversity protection to public health risk reduction.

Highlights

  • Urbanization significantly alters Earth’s land surface condition and has profound impacts on regional-to-global terrestrial ecosystem processes and services [1,2,3]

  • We clearly see that rates of change in enhanced vegetation index (EVI) were different across different time periods, which indicates that the assumptions in Landsat phenology algorithm developed by Melaas et al [31] may not hold in the heterogeneous urban environments

  • We derived the mean phenology (SOS, end of growing season (EOS), and length of growing season (LOS)) of urban vegetation at 30-m spatial resolution based on multi-year Landsat images along an east-west transect that runs through the center of Shanghai, China during 1984–2015

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Summary

Introduction

Urbanization significantly alters Earth’s land surface condition and has profound impacts on regional-to-global terrestrial ecosystem processes and services [1,2,3]. Understanding the effect of urbanization on vegetation phenology is a critical step to study the broader influences of urbanization on the environment. Urban vegetation provides crucial ecosystem services, such as reducing noise, absorbing pollutants, serving as habitats for some migratory and local birds. Previous studies confirmed that urban areas experience higher temperature than the surrounding rural regions [4,5,6]. This phenomenon is known as the urban heat island (UHI)

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