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Actions, indicators, and outputs in urban biodiversity plans: A multinational analysis of city practice

Urban biodiversity offers important benefits to residents and may be crucial to reaching global biodiversity conservation targets, but little research has been conducted on how cities actually plan for biodiversity. In this study, we conducted a mixed methods content analysis of biodiversity plans b...

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Autores principales: Pierce, Jennifer Rae, Barton, Melissa A., Tan, Mika Mei Jia, Oertel, Ginevra, Halder, Michael D., Lopez-Guijosa, Pablo Arturo, Nuttall, Rohan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7343153/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32639992
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0235773
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author Pierce, Jennifer Rae
Barton, Melissa A.
Tan, Mika Mei Jia
Oertel, Ginevra
Halder, Michael D.
Lopez-Guijosa, Pablo Arturo
Nuttall, Rohan
author_facet Pierce, Jennifer Rae
Barton, Melissa A.
Tan, Mika Mei Jia
Oertel, Ginevra
Halder, Michael D.
Lopez-Guijosa, Pablo Arturo
Nuttall, Rohan
author_sort Pierce, Jennifer Rae
collection PubMed
description Urban biodiversity offers important benefits to residents and may be crucial to reaching global biodiversity conservation targets, but little research has been conducted on how cities actually plan for biodiversity. In this study, we conducted a mixed methods content analysis of biodiversity plans by 39 cities around the world to determine whether they measured their actions, how they did so (via quantitative indicators and qualitative outputs), and what topics these actions and measures covered. We based our analytical framework on the Singapore Index on Cities’ Biodiversity (also known as the City Biodiversity Index), a widely applied 23-indicator index that helps cities track their progress in biodiversity planning. The Singapore Index groups its indicators into the following three core components: native biodiversity, ecosystem services, and governance and management. For actions and measures not classifiable by the Singapore Index, we inductively derived additional categories. Across all plans, we identified 2,231 actions, 346 indicators, and 444 outputs. We found that all of the plans included actions, while 82% included measures (67% included indicators and 72% included outputs). Only 29% of actions were associated with a measure. Overall, the plans covered all of the categories in the Singapore Index, particularly within the core components of native biodiversity and governance and management, though some plans had a narrower focus. The 20 additional urban biodiversity topics that were not covered by the Singapore Index framework included socioeconomic considerations, data collection, genetic diversity, urban agriculture and forestry, green infrastructure, human-wildlife conflicts, indigenous concerns, and citizen science. Indicators were the most common measures for native biodiversity and ecosystem service topics, while outputs were the most common measures for governance and management. Our results may inform the revision and development of urban biodiversity indicators in the post-2020 framework and of other initiatives that guide cities in contributing to local and global biodiversity goals.
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spelling pubmed-73431532020-07-17 Actions, indicators, and outputs in urban biodiversity plans: A multinational analysis of city practice Pierce, Jennifer Rae Barton, Melissa A. Tan, Mika Mei Jia Oertel, Ginevra Halder, Michael D. Lopez-Guijosa, Pablo Arturo Nuttall, Rohan PLoS One Research Article Urban biodiversity offers important benefits to residents and may be crucial to reaching global biodiversity conservation targets, but little research has been conducted on how cities actually plan for biodiversity. In this study, we conducted a mixed methods content analysis of biodiversity plans by 39 cities around the world to determine whether they measured their actions, how they did so (via quantitative indicators and qualitative outputs), and what topics these actions and measures covered. We based our analytical framework on the Singapore Index on Cities’ Biodiversity (also known as the City Biodiversity Index), a widely applied 23-indicator index that helps cities track their progress in biodiversity planning. The Singapore Index groups its indicators into the following three core components: native biodiversity, ecosystem services, and governance and management. For actions and measures not classifiable by the Singapore Index, we inductively derived additional categories. Across all plans, we identified 2,231 actions, 346 indicators, and 444 outputs. We found that all of the plans included actions, while 82% included measures (67% included indicators and 72% included outputs). Only 29% of actions were associated with a measure. Overall, the plans covered all of the categories in the Singapore Index, particularly within the core components of native biodiversity and governance and management, though some plans had a narrower focus. The 20 additional urban biodiversity topics that were not covered by the Singapore Index framework included socioeconomic considerations, data collection, genetic diversity, urban agriculture and forestry, green infrastructure, human-wildlife conflicts, indigenous concerns, and citizen science. Indicators were the most common measures for native biodiversity and ecosystem service topics, while outputs were the most common measures for governance and management. Our results may inform the revision and development of urban biodiversity indicators in the post-2020 framework and of other initiatives that guide cities in contributing to local and global biodiversity goals. Public Library of Science 2020-07-08 /pmc/articles/PMC7343153/ /pubmed/32639992 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0235773 Text en © 2020 Pierce et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Pierce, Jennifer Rae
Barton, Melissa A.
Tan, Mika Mei Jia
Oertel, Ginevra
Halder, Michael D.
Lopez-Guijosa, Pablo Arturo
Nuttall, Rohan
Actions, indicators, and outputs in urban biodiversity plans: A multinational analysis of city practice
title Actions, indicators, and outputs in urban biodiversity plans: A multinational analysis of city practice
title_full Actions, indicators, and outputs in urban biodiversity plans: A multinational analysis of city practice
title_fullStr Actions, indicators, and outputs in urban biodiversity plans: A multinational analysis of city practice
title_full_unstemmed Actions, indicators, and outputs in urban biodiversity plans: A multinational analysis of city practice
title_short Actions, indicators, and outputs in urban biodiversity plans: A multinational analysis of city practice
title_sort actions, indicators, and outputs in urban biodiversity plans: a multinational analysis of city practice
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7343153/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32639992
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0235773
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