[CANUFNET] AAG 2021 - Trees in the City: Presentation Recordings available

Tenley Conway tenley.conway at utoronto.ca
Tue Apr 20 14:45:11 EDT 2021


Video recordings of the four Trees in the City Sessions from the 2021 AAG conference are now available. Check out the 20 interesting research presentations, from drivers of  historical changes and environmental justice to cultural diversity and ecosystem services.



Thank you to the great presenters!

Tenley Conway and Shawn Landry





Session 1:  https://play.library.utoronto.ca/f2c63ebd16a455ae90ef125e8d2e1e86

1. Lara Roman, The rise and fall of the London planetree in Philadelphia: Legacies of past decision-making in urban forestry

2. Greg King, Effects of residential development on growth, climatic drivers, and resilience of mature trees

3. Marc Healy, Characterizing historical urban canopy cover through a manual interpretation methodology

4. Natalie Van Doorn, Urban forest changes and their drivers in Sacramento Region, CA.

5. David Miller, Annual changes in urban tree and turfgrass cover during a long-term drought in Los Angeles



Session 2:  https://play.library.utoronto.ca/5ca5a82896730c3dd03b6af854df4f13

1.Shawn Landry, Urban Tree Cover, Vegetation Diversity, and Asthma: Evidence from 500 Cities

2. Daniel Sax, Improvement, not Displacement: Presenting a dimensional analysis clarifying the relationships between urban greening and green gentrification

3. Erin Hardman, Urban forest equity: An analysis of the distribution of edible trees in Bloomington and Indianapolis, Indiana

4. Andrew Millward, Trees Are Good, But Better for Some: Environmental Justice and the Management of Urban Forests in the United States

5. Bhuwan Thapa, Race, income, and urban forest quality: A spatial analysis of environmental justice in Indiana



Session 3: https://play.library.utoronto.ca/cb20ccbf73e44e4696497e55c1414fd3

1. Patrick Hurley, Assessing Access to Culturally Significant Species in New York City, USA’s Urban Forest: The case of Ginkgo biloba and Morus species Harvesting by Chinese Americans and their Descendants

2. Lorien Nesbitt, Intercultural exchange in contested space: the biocultural diversity of urban forests through the lens of Vancouver, Canada

3. Douglas Shoemaker, A Story in 4 Maps: How Spatial Analytics and the Press Prod Charlotte Toward Keeping Canopy Goals

4. 5Rinku Roy Chowdhury, A multi-city analysis of urban vegetation in neighborhoods and parcels: the role of socioeconomic and institutional contexts

5. Adam Berland, Property parcel characteristics help understand urban vegetation patterns



Session 4: https://play.library.utoronto.ca/2f97829cc44add822a080ddfa66c5820

1. Camilo Ordóñez, Public perceptions of urban forests: a systematic review and interdisciplinary synthesis

2. Janina Kowalski, Life, Death & Weeding: The Co-Creation of Urban Food Tree Ecologies

3. Corinne Bassett, The Urban Forest Management Action Framework: How human actions impact urban tree ecosystem services

4. Nicholas Geron, Watered Down Stewardship: How residential and state stewardship regimes inform juvenile tree survivorship.

5. Annie Yuan, Exploring Urban Residents’ Interest and Socio-ecological Value of Living Green Infrastructure in Philadelphia, PA


Tenley Conway | Professor and Associate Chair-Research
Department of Geography, Geomatics and Environment| University of Toronto- Mississauga
3359 Mississauga Rd, Mississauga, ON Canada L5L 1C6
http://sites.utm.utoronto.ca/conway/

Associate Editor | Urban Forestry and Urban Greening<https://www.journals.elsevier.com/urban-forestry-and-urban-greening>


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