THE VALUE OF GREEN BELTS IN URBAN SPRAWL: A CASE STUDY OD TAICHUNG CITY, TAIWAN

Authors

  • Chih-Hao Chen
  • Walter Den

Keywords:

Carbon flux, Urban Sprawl, Environmental Index, Urban Management

Abstract

The role of green belts is not only to provide the recreation for human activities but also to
improve environmental quality and to provide refuges for wildlife under intensified urban development. After
the new demarcation of administrative areas, the influx and construction of industrial zones and commercial
buildings has caused a major change of the original landscape in the Dadu hill area in Taichung City, Taiwan.
The aims of this study are to provide recommendations pertaining the design of ecological corridors to improve
the connectivity of the remaining green places, and the assessment of the health of habitat for the developed
urban area. We compared the biodiversity (birds, mammals, plantation) and carbon flux in three different
suburban areas including a campus, a metropolitan park and an undeveloped woodland in regular disturbance by
human and fire. According to the results of habitat similarity, the metropolitan park and campus were grouped
with the higher diversity of birds, but the woodland had the higher diversity of plantation and mammals.
Seasonal change is the main factor which affects the carbon flux and vegetation growth situation, and the
disturbance by human activities and canopy and coverage by plantation are the causes of fluctuations. The
habitat assessment which integrated the biodiversity and carbon flux provided another angle to evaluate the
greenbelt design comprehensively. However, the quantification of the whole ecosystem service value is a further
direction of environment management, especially in green place conserving under the urban sprawl.

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Published

2017-01-28

How to Cite

Chih-Hao Chen, & Walter Den. (2017). THE VALUE OF GREEN BELTS IN URBAN SPRAWL: A CASE STUDY OD TAICHUNG CITY, TAIWAN. GEOMATE Journal, 12(33), 147–152. Retrieved from https://geomatejournal.com/geomate/article/view/1252

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