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      A Global Geospatial Ecosystem Services Estimate of Urban Agriculture

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          Promoting ecosystem and human health in urban areas using Green Infrastructure: A literature review

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            PERSIANN-CDR: Daily Precipitation Climate Data Record from Multisatellite Observations for Hydrological and Climate Studies

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              Future urban land expansion and implications for global croplands

              Urbanization’s contribution to land use change emerges as an important sustainability concern. Here, we demonstrate that projected urban area expansion will take place on some of the world’s most productive croplands, in particular in megaurban regions in Asia and Africa. This dynamic adds pressure to potentially strained future food systems and threatens livelihoods in vulnerable regions. Urban expansion often occurs on croplands. However, there is little scientific understanding of how global patterns of future urban expansion will affect the world’s cultivated areas. Here, we combine spatially explicit projections of urban expansion with datasets on global croplands and crop yields. Our results show that urban expansion will result in a 1.8–2.4% loss of global croplands by 2030, with substantial regional disparities. About 80% of global cropland loss from urban expansion will take place in Asia and Africa. In both Asia and Africa, much of the cropland that will be lost is more than twice as productive as national averages. Asia will experience the highest absolute loss in cropland, whereas African countries will experience the highest percentage loss of cropland. Globally, the croplands that are likely to be lost were responsible for 3–4% of worldwide crop production in 2000. Urban expansion is expected to take place on cropland that is 1.77 times more productive than the global average. The loss of cropland is likely to be accompanied by other sustainability risks and threatens livelihoods, with diverging characteristics for different megaurban regions. Governance of urban area expansion thus emerges as a key area for securing livelihoods in the agrarian economies of the Global South.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Earth's Future
                Earth's Future
                Wiley-Blackwell
                23284277
                January 2018
                January 10 2018
                : 6
                : 1
                : 40-60
                Article
                10.1002/2017EF000536
                7a7cee13-c6e1-48a7-b4aa-c62dedf37649
                © 2018

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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