Southeast Asian cities have been growing rapidly since entering the 21st century, including Bangkok where their urban agglomeration increased from 6.4 million in 2000 to 10.5 million in 2020. The regional urban growth creates marked landscape transformations, most of which are within the region’s biodiversity hotspot. The consequent loss of vegetation cover tends to reduce biodiversity and ecosystem services, and thus well-being benefits. Most people live and work in urban areas, and there is growing interest in improving the quality of urban ecosystems. However, relatively limited urban ecological research has been conducted in rapidly urbanising tropical regions that can inform planning and management for biodiversity conservation and sus...
Increasing urbanization has destroyed natural areas and detach people from nature, with implications...
Urbanization is a global phenomenon which is projected by the United Nations to grow annually at 65 ...
As the world's urban population is expected to grow by 2.5 billion over the next 30 years, urban lan...
Urban forest assessments have been implemented in many cities worldwide to evaluate the urban fores...
Rapid economic development and urban expansion of the Bangkok Metropolitan Region (BMR) places press...
Urban trees provide numerous ecosystem services in cities such as pollution absorption and reduced u...
Biodiversity and Conservation, 2014;23:963-978Although urban sprawl is increasingly becoming a world...
Rapid urbanization has changed the structure and function of natural ecosystems, especially floodpla...
As important node cities in the Belt and Road region, Shenzhen and Bangkok are faced with similar en...
Urban vegetation provides many ecosystem services that make cities more liveable for people. As the ...
This study focuses on the analysis of ecosystem services provided by green spaces in Bangkok, Thaila...
Megacities contain at least 10 million people whose wellbeing largely depends on ecosystem services ...
Urbanization is increasingly homogenizing the biota of less developed countries. Even though urban s...
Three inventories were conducted to quantify Bangkok\u27s green infrastructure for future planning a...
Globally, cities are growing rapidly in size and density and this has caused profound impacts on urb...
Increasing urbanization has destroyed natural areas and detach people from nature, with implications...
Urbanization is a global phenomenon which is projected by the United Nations to grow annually at 65 ...
As the world's urban population is expected to grow by 2.5 billion over the next 30 years, urban lan...
Urban forest assessments have been implemented in many cities worldwide to evaluate the urban fores...
Rapid economic development and urban expansion of the Bangkok Metropolitan Region (BMR) places press...
Urban trees provide numerous ecosystem services in cities such as pollution absorption and reduced u...
Biodiversity and Conservation, 2014;23:963-978Although urban sprawl is increasingly becoming a world...
Rapid urbanization has changed the structure and function of natural ecosystems, especially floodpla...
As important node cities in the Belt and Road region, Shenzhen and Bangkok are faced with similar en...
Urban vegetation provides many ecosystem services that make cities more liveable for people. As the ...
This study focuses on the analysis of ecosystem services provided by green spaces in Bangkok, Thaila...
Megacities contain at least 10 million people whose wellbeing largely depends on ecosystem services ...
Urbanization is increasingly homogenizing the biota of less developed countries. Even though urban s...
Three inventories were conducted to quantify Bangkok\u27s green infrastructure for future planning a...
Globally, cities are growing rapidly in size and density and this has caused profound impacts on urb...
Increasing urbanization has destroyed natural areas and detach people from nature, with implications...
Urbanization is a global phenomenon which is projected by the United Nations to grow annually at 65 ...
As the world's urban population is expected to grow by 2.5 billion over the next 30 years, urban lan...