Ecological and developmental history impacts the equitable distribution of services

Date

2025-03-11

Department

Program

Citation of Original Publication

Darling, Lindsay E, Christine R Rollinson, Robert T Fahey, Anita T Morzillo, Lea R Johnson, Matthew Baker, Myla FJ Aronson, and Brady S Hardiman. “Ecological and Developmental History Impacts the Equitable Distribution of Services.” Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, March 11, 2025. https://doi.org/10.1002/fee.2841.

Rights

Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International

Subjects

Abstract

The ecological and developmental history of the Chicago, Illinois, region has affected the current distribution of forests therein. These same factors, along with systemic and long-lasting racial segregation, have shaped the distribution of the urban populations that benefit from the ecosystem services provided by urban forests. This study demonstrates that forest patch history is related to forest attributes like tree species composition, tree density, canopy height, and structural heterogeneity—all of which are important predictors of a forest's ability to provide ecosystem services. However, this effect of forest history was only seen in forest cores, as forest edges were similar regardless of patch history. We also found that forests in minoritized communities tended to be less able to support high levels of ecosystem services. This research indicates that, when improving green equity, it is important to consider the variable capacity of forests to provide ecosystem services.