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Dynamic heterogeneity: a framework to promote ecological integration and hypothesis generation in urban systems
Authors:S. T. A. Pickett  M. L. Cadenasso  E. J. Rosi-Marshall  K. T. Belt  P. M. Groffman  J. M. Grove  E. G. Irwin  S. S. Kaushal  S. L. LaDeau  C. H. Nilon  C. M. Swan  P. S. Warren
Affiliation:1.Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies,Millbrook,USA;2.Department of Plant Sciences,University of California Davis,Davis,USA;3.USDA Forest Service, Baltimore Field Station,University of Maryland,Baltimore,USA;4.Advanced Science Research Center and Brooklyn College Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences,City University of New York,New York,USA;5.Agricultural, Environmental and Development Economics,The Ohio State University,Columbus,USA;6.College Park,University of Maryland,College Park,USA;7.School of Natural Resources Fisheries and Wildlife,University of Missouri-Columbia,Columbia,USA;8.Department of Geography & Environmental Systems,University of Maryland,Baltimore,USA;9.Department of Environmental Conservation,University of Massachusetts – Amherst,Amherst,USA
Abstract:Urban areas are understood to be extraordinarily spatially heterogeneous. Spatial heterogeneity, and its causes, consequences, and changes, are central to ecological science. The social sciences and urban design and planning professions also include spatial heterogeneity as a key concern. However, urban ecology, as a pursuit that integrates across these disciplines, lacks a theoretical framework that synthesizes the diverse and important aspects of heterogeneity. This paper presents the concept of dynamic heterogeneity as a tool to explore how social and ecological heterogeneities interact and how they together act as both an outcome of past interactions and a driver future heterogeneity and system functions. To accomplish this goal, we relate heterogeneity to the fundamental concept of the human ecosystem. The human ecosystem concept identifies key processes that require operationalized models of dynamic heterogeneity in three process realms: the flow of materials, the assembly of urban ecosystem biota, and the locational choices humans make concerning land. We exemplify a specific dynamic model of heterogeneity in each of these realms, and indicate a range of complementary statistical approaches to integrate the drivers and outcomes of dynamic heterogeneity across the three realms. We synthesize a hierarchical framework for a theory of dynamic urban heterogeneity, noting its complementarity to other major urban theories and general model approaches. We hypothesize that human actions and structures amplify the dynamics of heterogeneity in urban systems.
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