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Response of spatio-temporal differentiation characteristics of habitat quality to land surface temperature in a fast urbanized cityopen access

Authors
Hu, YonggeXu, EnkaiKim, GunwooLiu, ChangTian, Guohang
Issue Date
Dec-2021
Publisher
MDPI
Keywords
urban biodiversity; urban habitat quality; InVEST model; land surface temperature; Moran' s I; Zhengzhou
Citation
FORESTS, v.12, no.12, pp.1 - 16
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
FORESTS
Volume
12
Number
12
Start Page
1
End Page
16
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/140130
DOI
10.3390/f12121668
Abstract
The degradation and loss of global urban habitat and biodiversity have been extensively studied as a global issue. Urban heat islands caused by abnormal land surface temperature (LST) have been shown to be the main reason for this problem. With the accelerated urbanization process and the increasing possibility of abnormal temperatures in Zhengzhou, China, more and more creatures cannot adapt and survive in urban habitats, including humans; therefore, Zhengzhou was selected as the study area. The purpose of this study is to explore the response of urban habitat quality to LST, which provides a basis for the scientific protection of urban habitat and biodiversity in Zhengzhou from the perspective of alleviating heat island effect. We used the InVEST-Habitat Quality model to calculate the urban habitat quality, combined with GIS spatial statistics and bivariate spatial autocorrelation analysis, to explore the response of habitat quality to LST. The results show the following: (1) From 2000 to 2015, the mean value of urban habitat quality gradually decreased from 0.361 to 0.304, showing a downward trend as a whole. (2) There was an obvious gradient effect between habitat quality and LST. Habitat quality’s high values were distributed in the central and northern built-up area and low values were distributed in the high-altitude western forest habitat and northern water habitat. However, the distribution of LST gradient values were opposite to the habitat quality to a great extent. (3) There were four agglomeration types between LST and habitat quality at specific spatial locations: the high-high type was scattered mainly in the western part of the study area and in the northern region; the high-low type was mainly distributed in the densely populated and actively constructed central areas; the low-low type was mainly distributed in the urban-rural intersections and small and medium-sized rural settlements; and the low-high type was mainly distributed in the western mountainous hills and the northern waters.
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GRADUATE SCHOOL OF URBAN STUDIES (DEPARTMENT OF URBAN AND REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT)
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