Evan Elderbrock
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View article: Evaluating Urban Green Space Inequity to Promote Distributional Justice in Portland, Oregon
Evaluating Urban Green Space Inequity to Promote Distributional Justice in Portland, Oregon Open
Access and exposure to urban green space—the combination of parks and vegetative cover in cities—are associated with various health benefits. As urban green space is often unequally distributed throughout cities, understanding how it is al…
View article: Urban edge trees: Urban form and meteorology drive elemental carbon deposition to canopies and soils
Urban edge trees: Urban form and meteorology drive elemental carbon deposition to canopies and soils Open
Urban tree canopies are a significant sink for atmospheric elemental carbon (EC)--an air pollutant that is a powerful climate-forcing agent and threat to human health. Understanding what controls EC deposition to urban trees is therefore i…
View article: A Guide to Public Green Space Planning for Urban Ecosystem Services
A Guide to Public Green Space Planning for Urban Ecosystem Services Open
Street trees, native plantings, bioswales, and other forms of green infrastructure alleviate urban air and water pollution, diminish flooding vulnerability, support pollinators, and provide other benefits critical to human well-being. Urba…
View article: Original data for resident and Delphi surveys and green land cover assessment
Original data for resident and Delphi surveys and green land cover assessment Open
This repository contains raw survey data, Delphi analysis responses, and green space quantification GIS data for the Friendly Area Neighborhood in Eugene, Oregon.
View article: Original data for resident and Delphi surveys and green land cover assessment
Original data for resident and Delphi surveys and green land cover assessment Open
This repository contains raw survey data, Delphi analysis responses, and green space quantification GIS data for the Friendly Area Neighborhood in Eugene, Oregon.
View article: Oak trees are elemental carbon sinks in urban ecosystems: patterns and drivers
Oak trees are elemental carbon sinks in urban ecosystems: patterns and drivers Open
<p>Cities represent a significant source of atmospheric elemental carbon (EC), a minor constituent of particulate matter (PM) but a major climate-forcing agent and air pollutant. Urban trees scavenge PM and regulate material fluxes t…
View article: Revealing Promising Pathways for Increasing Urban Ecosystem Services: An Approach Combining Stakeholder Priorities with Ecosystem Service Quantification
Revealing Promising Pathways for Increasing Urban Ecosystem Services: An Approach Combining Stakeholder Priorities with Ecosystem Service Quantification Open
Urban development diminishes the delivery of ecosystem services (ES), defined as benefits from ecological processes and functions critical to human health and well-being. Land-use planners and environmental managers are increasingly famili…