Abstract

Ecosystem services (ES) in cities and surrounding suburban areas are one of the major factors which guarantee quality of life. Most studies directly referring to urban ecosystem services are conducted on a local scale or for selected cities. There are few studies which focus on temporal changes of the provision of ecosystem services across a large number of cities. This paper analyzes selected land use type (forest, green urban area), soil sealing, selected ecosystem services (food provisioning, climate regulation, recreation), and biodiversity potential in 85 large cities (over 100,000 citizens) from the Continental (Central and Eastern) biogeographical region in Europe. We used the Corine Land Cover (CLC) data for 1990, 2000, 2006, and 2012. Our main findings are as follows: (1) The increase of forest areas was the highest in 2006–2012, and of urban green areas in 2000–2006, mostly in cities in Germany and the western part of the Czech Republic; (2) The process of soil sealing growth occurred in all studied cities and the rate was the most intense in Polish cities; (3) There was a decrease of food production and biodiversity potential in all the analyzed cities; (4) climate regulating services experienced only slight changes; (5) There was a very positive trend of the recreation indicator in most core zones of the cities in Germany and several cities in the Czech Republic, Poland, and Denmark. Moreover, our results of the temporal changes of land use and ES in European cities in the Continental biogeographical region indicate how important it is to monitor CLC and ES for potential spatial planning and regional policy interventions.

Highlights

  • Ecosystem services (ES) in cities and surrounding suburban areas are one of the factors which guarantee the quality of life in cities [1,2,3,4,5,6,7]

  • Besides forest areas, urban green areas increased in surface area in most cities

  • This study presents a study of changes in selected types of land cover and Ecosystem Services in 85 European cities with a population of over 100,000 residents, located within the Continental biogeographical region, conducted for a 22-year period

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Summary

Introduction

Ecosystem services (ES) in cities and surrounding suburban areas are one of the factors which guarantee the quality of life in cities [1,2,3,4,5,6,7]. The consequence of the decreasing surface area of ecosystems within urbanized areas is an automatic weakening of ecosystem services, and a decrease in the quality of life. This problem is important in the context of changes occurring in the environment and their impact on human life, with climate change as an example. Consequences of such changes will impact the functioning of cities. Such regional diversity has been confirmed in studies about the spatial distribution of urban green space development across European cities [13]

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