Urbanization and Spatial Aggregation Impair Multifunctionality in Urban Vacant Lots
Yuki Iwachido, Himari Katsuhara, Kaho Maehara, Mahoro Tomitaka, Kensuke Seto, Shun Nonaka, Masayuki Ushio, Maiko Kagami, Takehiro Sasaki

TL;DR
This study explores how urban vacant lots can support biodiversity and ecosystem functions, finding that soil moisture helps while urbanization and spatial aggregation hinder these benefits.
Contribution
The paper presents the first assessment of biodiversity and ecosystem multifunctionality in urban vacant lots.
Findings
Urbanization and spatial aggregation of vacant lots indirectly impair ecosystem multifunctionality.
Soil moisture directly enhances several ecosystem functions and average multifunctionality.
Environmental factors, plants, and microbes all influence ecosystem functions in vacant lots.
Abstract
Urban shrinkage, driven by population decline rather than expansion, is an emerging concern in many developed countries. This demographic shift increases the prevalence of novel green spaces, such as vacant lots, prompting interest in their potential to enhance urban biodiversity and ecosystem multifunctionality. However, biodiversity‐ecosystem multifunctionality relationships in vacant lots remain largely unexamined. We investigated 69 vacant lots in Yokohama, Japan, a city facing potential population decline, by quantifying six environmental factors, five ecosystem functions, and taxonomic and functional diversity and composition of plants, bacteria, and fungi. We used structural equation modelling to analyse the direct and indirect effects of environmental and ecological variables on ecosystem function and multifunctionality. Additionally, to account for trade‐offs and synergies…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUrban Green Space and Health · Urbanization and City Planning · Land Use and Ecosystem Services
