Urban Regions : Ecology and Planning Beyond the City

(Jacob Rumans) #1

15 0Nature, food, and water


Iqu Edm
Sam
Sam
Sap

Sto

Por
Cut

Buc
Bam

Erz Phi
Kag
Ott
Edm
Relatively small
0.25-0.5

Small-medium
0.5-1

Intermediate
1-2

Medium-large
2-4

Quite large
4-8

Can

City population (million)

Bar Bra
Chi

Nai

Rom Te h
Cai
Lon

Sat

Ber

Ban

Kua

Nan Por

Nan

Number of major wetlands in urban region

00

20

40

60

80

90

2

4

6

8

10

12

17

Rah

Mega
8-16

Natural ve

getation cover alon

g lakeshores/ pondshores (%)

= Wetlands
= Lakeshores/
pondshores

Figure 6.7Major wetlands and natural lakeshores relative to city population size.
Major wetland is > approx. 4 km^2 ;anunusually long or large wetland is counted
twice. Wetlands include salt marsh, mangrove swamp, freshwater marsh, and
freshwater swamp, and are present along coasts, along rivers, and in depressions.
Lakeshores include major pondshores but exclude shorelines of reservoirs. Natural
lakeshore vegetation is the predominant land cover within approx. 1 km of a
shoreline. City population is in year 2000±2yr(Chapter5 and Table5.1). See
Figure 6.2 caption for city information.

Re-creation of wetlands, large and small, and their benefits is ahigh priorityin
urban regions. Especially suitable locations are at the base of certain hills and
mountains, on floodplains of rivers and streams, along coastal areas, and in the
outer urban-region ring. Tiny wetlands, some seasonal, may be produced at the
ends of stormwater drainage pipes.

Food inurban regions
Diversity and stability relative to agriculture
[F1]Cropland is the predominant land cover of the urban-region ring in half of
the regions(Color Figures2--39).
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