US cities can manage national hydrology and biodiversity using local infrastructure policy

susan's picture

Cities are concentrations of sociopolitical power and prime architects of land transformation, while also serving as consumption hubs of “hard” water and energy infrastructures. These infrastructures extend well outside metropolitan boundaries and impact distal river ecosystems. We used a comprehensive model to quantify the roles of anthropogenic stressors on hydrologic alteration and biodiversity in US streams and isolate the impacts stemming from hard infrastructure developments in cities.

Original Source

Mark Content Private(Internal): 
Email Alert: 
9581–9586
36
114
Publication Date: 
05/09/2017