Abstract

BackgroundCities are social-ecological systems characterized by remarkably high spatial and temporal heterogeneity, which are closely related to myriad urban problems. However, the tools to map and quantify this heterogeneity are lacking. We here developed a new three-level classification scheme, by considering ecosystem types (level 1), urban function zones (level 2), and land cover elements (level 3), to map and quantify the hierarchical spatial heterogeneity of urban landscapes.MethodsWe applied the scheme using an object-based approach for classification using very high spatial resolution imagery and a vector layer of building location and characteristics. We used a top-down classification procedure by conducting the classification in the order of ecosystem types, function zones, and land cover elements. The classification of the lower level was based on the results of the higher level. We used an object-based methodology to carry out the three-level classification.ResultsWe found that the urban ecosystem type accounted for 45.3% of the land within the Shenzhen city administrative boundary. Within the urban ecosystem type, residential and industrial zones were the main zones, accounting for 38.4% and 33.8%, respectively. Tree canopy was the dominant element in Shenzhen city, accounting for 55.6% over all ecosystem types, which includes agricultural and forest. However, in the urban ecosystem type, the proportion of tree canopy was only 22.6% because most trees were distributed in the forest ecosystem type. The proportion of trees was 23.2% in industrial zones, 2.2% higher than that in residential zones. That information “hidden” in the usual statistical summaries scaled to the entire administrative unit of Shenzhen has great potential for improving urban management.ConclusionsThis paper has taken the theoretical understanding of urban spatial heterogeneity and used it to generate a classification scheme that exploits remotely sensed imagery, infrastructural data available at a municipal level, and object-based spatial analysis. For effective planning and management, the hierarchical levels of landscape classification (level 1), the analysis of use and cover by urban zones (level 2), and the fundamental elements of land cover (level 3), each exposes different respects relevant to city plans and management.

Highlights

  • Urban landscapes are highly heterogeneous in space, structurally and functionally (Band et al 2005; Cadenasso et al 2013; Zhou et al 2014)

  • We developed a three-level classification scheme and mapped those levels based on high spatial resolution imagery and a municipal census of building size, height, and usage using an object-based workflow

  • The classification on level 1 showed that the ecosystem types of forest and urban were the dominant ecosystems within the administrative boundaries of Shenzhen city, amounting to 51.4% and 45.3%, respectively

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Summary

Introduction

Urban landscapes are highly heterogeneous in space, structurally and functionally (Band et al 2005; Cadenasso et al 2013; Zhou et al 2014). Remote sensing has long been used to quantify and map the spatial heterogeneity of the urban landscape, especially its biophysical structure at coarser scales. With the growing availability of very high spatial resolution satellite imagery (e.g., 1-m IKONOS, 0.6-m QuickBird) and aerial photos/digital imagery, remote sensing has been increasingly used to map specific landscape features such as buildings, trees, and smallsized lawns, to understand the fine-scale spatial heterogeneity of urban landscapes (Lee et al 2003; Ouma and Tateishi 2008; Zhou and Troy 2008). We here developed a new three-level classification scheme, by considering ecosystem types (level 1), urban function zones (level 2), and land cover elements (level 3), to map and quantify the hierarchical spatial heterogeneity of urban landscapes

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