How our cities should respond to the biodiversity extinction crisis | Pursuit by The University of Melbourne


How our cities should respond to the biodiversity extinction crisis

Globally, thousands of governments have declared a climate emergency, but cities have a key role to play in conserving and restoring biodiversity

By Dr Judy Bush, Dr Cathy Oke, Dr Georgia Garrard, University of Melbourne; Professor Niki Frantzeskaki, Swinburne University; Professor Sarah Bekessy, RMIT University and Dr James Fitzsimons, The Nature Conservancy

While the world has been battling the COVID-19 pandemic, there has also been a biodiversity extinction crisis unfolding in our cities and across the planet.

It is the world’s sixth mass extinction.

A mass extinction occurs when the Earth loses three quarters of our species in a geologically short interval. Biologists have suggested that given the current devastating loss of species, we have entered another mass extinction period, only the sixth experienced on Earth over the past 540 million years.

We need a shift in cities towards decisions that encompass environmental wins. Picture: Getty Images

Extinctions, caused by habitat destruction and now climate change, have significant implications for nature’s resilience, as well as the resources nature contributes to people.

Meanwhile, during extended COVID-19 lockdowns, accessing nature also became an issue of environmental justice for many people, while protecting and restoring nature has been recognised as an essential psychological resilience pathway for people’s post-pandemic recovery.

In 2021, many local governments developed innovative approaches to support the economic and social recovery of their COVID-19 devastated urban centres.

Many of these responses have included continued or increased investment in nature.

Later this year, the 15th Conference of Parties for the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD COP15) is meeting in Kunming, China. The CBD CoP15 meeting comes at a critical time for negotiating a Post-2020 Framework for Biodiversity – it will set global strategic priorities for biodiversity conservation and restoration.

As signatories to the Convention on Biological Diversity, national governments will negotiate the content for the Post-2020 Framework, defining the transformational changes that are needed to realise the 2050 Vision for Biodiversity.

The CBD CoP15 meeting is also critical for cities – local and subnational government advocates see CoP15 as a significant moment to highlight their efforts to avert further biodiversity losses.

During COVID-19 lockdowns, accessing nature became an issue of environmental justice for many people. Picture: Getty Images

To help with our understanding of the multiple ways nature should be valued in cities, our research, published in the inaugural issue of npj Urban Sustainability, identifies key priorities for cities in addressing the biodiversity extinction crisis.

Our work applies the framework of the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) to examine the contributions nature makes to people across three areas – nature for nature, nature for society and nature for culture.

NATURE FOR NATURE

This framework highlights the intrinsic value of biodiversity.

It informs two key urban priorities. The first is that cities should integrate biodiversity conservation and restoration objectives into urban planning.

This will mean a shift from a ‘linear’ to a ‘systems’ way of thinking when it comes to agenda setting in cities, in order to enable the recognition of the co-benefits of nature in urban landscapes.

A ‘systems’ way of thinking means planning and managing cities in ways that acknowledge the complexities, multi-functionality and interlinkages between policy domains, disciplines, sectors and infrastructures.

Shifting from a ‘linear’ to a ‘systems’ approach also acknowledges that actions and interventions can create feedback loops, requiring monitoring and adaptive management to respond to these dynamic processes.

Cities must focus on creating resilient and climate-adapted urban landscapes. Picture: Getty Images

Secondly, when we address these human-nature conflicts in cities, we need a shift towards decisions that encompass environmental wins, while also enhancing a city’s sustainability teams’ ecological capacity.

Nature for society

This points to the instrumental contributions nature makes to people, including provisioning and regulating services – like cooling, air and water purification – while also providing food, fibre and other resources.

From this perspective, cities must focus on creating resilient and climate-adapted urban landscapes.

These are landscapes that are better suited to the increasing temperatures and other impacts associated with climate change and urbanisation. Creating resilient and climate-adapted landscapes includes careful selection of more heat tolerant species, and ensuring water supply to maintain landscapes during droughts.

This requires a shift to incorporating knowledge of ecology, design, planning and urban resilience for guiding climate and nature-based urbanism.

It means integrating nature into our urban planning, design and development throughout all stages of the urbanisation process. It also means seeing nature as an integral part of healthy, resilient cities, rather than an afterthought that can be added only if there’s sufficient space and funding.

Cities should provide opportunities for people to reconnect with nature by providing green spaces throughout a city. Picture: Getty Images

Nature for culture

Nature for culture acknowledges the importance of people’s connections with nature, at individual, social and community levels.

Considering this, cities should provide and enhance opportunities for people to reconnect with nature by providing green spaces throughout a city, as well as offering new forms of engagement programs and city festivals.

Everyday nature connections can contribute to enhancing people’s perceptions, understanding and appreciation of urban nature and its contributions.

Transformational action is required to address the biodiversity extinction crisis and cities have an unprecedented opportunity to drive positive change.

We need a shift in ways of knowing and connecting knowledge – bringing together the voices and perspectives of Traditional Owners, with universities, communities and governments to create approaches that mainstream biodiversity actions in cities.

Cities have the opportunity to collaborate across jurisdictional and governance boundaries, to aggregate their individual efforts, to strategically plan for and restore nature across not only the metropolitan area, but across regions – increasing the benefits to nature and people in the broader urban landscapes.

As of February of this year, 1,874 governments around the world at local, state and national levels have declared a climate emergency, with many of these including recognition of the interlinked biodiversity emergency.

CoP15 can, and must, be a key moment for our planet – a chance to define a global ambition for biodiversity conservation and restoration to help avert a looming catastrophe, and highlight the critical role that cities and the populations can play.

Banner: Getty Images

First published on 12 March 2021 in Design

Close

Republish this article

We believe in the free flow of information. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivatives 3.0 Australia (CC BY-ND 3.0 AU), so you can republish our articles for free, online or in print.

All republished articles must be attributed in the following way and contain links to both the site and original article: "This article was first published on Pursuit. Read the original article."

Media enquiries

Phone
+61 3 8344 4123
Email
news@media.unimelb.edu.au

The Media Office is staffed from 8am–5pm Monday to Friday.

The University has a television and radio studio to facilitate live and prerecorded broadcast quality interviews with media. You can also Find an expert for commentary.

Recommended for you

Pursuit

Receive your weekly email digest from Pursuit

By subscribing, you agree to our privacy statement.

Privacy Statement

The University of Melbourne (University) collects, uses, handles and discloses personal information in accordance with the Privacy and Data Protection Act 2014 (Vic) (Act) and other applicable legislation.

This Privacy Statement relates only to the collection of personal information in relation to the Pursuit Website. Please refer to our Privacy Policy and Privacy Statement for the University of Melbourne Website for information in relation to the broader practices in relation to the collection, use handling and disclosure of personal information by the University.

Definition of Personal Information

"Personal information" is defined under the Act to mean information or an opinion (including information or an opinion forming part of a database), that is recorded in any form and whether true or not, about an individual whose identity is apparent, or can reasonably be ascertained, from the information or opinion, but does not include information of a kind to which the Health Records Act 2001(Vic) applies.

Collection of Personal Information by the University in relation to Pursuit

The University may collect, store and handle personal information about you including but not limited to your name and email address for the sole purpose of allowing you to subscribe to Pursuit’s weekly digest of cutting-edge research findings and expert commentary.

Disclosure of Personal Information

The University would seek your prior written consent before using your personal information for any purpose other than that which is described above and before disclosing your personal information to any third party.

Access to Your Personal Information

You can access any personal information the University holds about you by contacting the University’s Privacy Officer at privacy-officer@unimelb.edu.au.

We acknowledge and pay respect to the Traditional Owners of the lands upon which our campuses are situated.
Phone: 13 MELB (13 6352) | International: +61 3 9035 5511 The University of Melbourne ABN: 84 002 705 224 CRICOS Provider Code: 00116K (visa information)
Close