City-size bias in knowledge on the effects of urban nature on people and biodiversity
2020
The evidence base for the benefits of urban nature for people and biodiversity is strong. However,
cities are diverse and the social and environmental contexts of cities are likely to influence the
observed effects of urban nature, and the application of evidence to differing contexts. To explore
biases in the evidence base for the effects of urban nature, we text-matched city names in the
abstracts and affiliations of 14 786 journal articles, from separate searches for articles on urban
biodiversity, the health and wellbeing impacts of urban nature, and on urban ecosystem services.
City names were found in 51% of article abstracts and 92% of affiliations. Most large cities were
studied many times over, while only a small proportion of small cities were studied once or twice.
Almost half the cities studied also had an author with an affiliation from that city. Most studies
were from large developed cities, with relatively few studies from Africa and South America in
particular. These biases mean the evidence base for the effects of urban nature on people and on
biodiversity does not adequately represent the lived experience of the 41% of the world’s urban
population who live in small cities, nor the residents of the many rapidly urbanising areas of the
developing world. Care should be taken when extrapolating research findings from large global
cities to smaller cities and cities in the developing world. Future research should encourage
research design focussed on answering research questions rather than city selection by
convenience, disentangle the role of city size from measures of urban intensity (such as population
density or impervious surface cover), avoid gross urban-rural dualisms, and better contextualise
existing research across social and environmental contexts.
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