Learn how cities can protect biodiversity and secure the benefits of healthy ecosystems for all residents. This course focuses on biodiversity strategy in the context of city priorities, constraints, and planning processes. It provides learners with tools they can use to integrate nature-supportive actions into wider urban practices.
Cities are ecosystems. And like all ecosystems, cities depend for their well-being on the countless living things that they comprise. Natural ecosystems within and near cities clean our air and water, moderate climatic extremes, supply the food and fiber that sustain our economies, and provide the beauty and recreational opportunities that help make our lives whole.
In this course, we examine biodiversity and strategies to protect it, but we do it through a specifically urban lens. We examine how biodiversity benefits cities’ human residents, and what cities can do to support biodiversity in the context of city priorities, constraints, and planning processes.
Learners completing this course will gain the knowledge and analytical tools necessary to:
Understand the importance of biodiversity to cities in terms of economic, environmental, and public health benefits. Describe methods for prioritizing species or ecosystems for protection and make the case for ecosystem protection even in the absence of detailed biological information.
Understand the roles that habitat size, connectivity, diversity and complexity play in supporting citywide and regional biodiversity. Recognize how these determinants of habitat quality manifest in urban design and planning.
Articulate the benefits of biodiversity in terms of public health, economic well-being and civic life. Formulate strategies for quantifying and communicating these benefits to government and public stakeholders.
Understand the principles of data strategy and indicator development; data acquisition, sharing, safety and governance; and interpretation and communication of data insights.
In this course, we examine how biodiversity benefits cities’ human residents, and what cities can do to support biodiversity in the context of city priorities, constraints, and planning processes.
3 hours
English, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Indonesian Bahasa and Mandarin Chinese
Personalized certificate provided upon course completion
We explore why biodiversity is important to cities, and how cities can contribute to protecting biodiversity regionally and globally. We examine biodiversity through an urban lens and develop a specifically urban approach to protecting biodiversity and supporting healthy ecosystems. We also explore concepts useful to the prioritization of species for conservation while motivating a species-agnostic, whole-ecosystem approach.
We examine the traditional concept of habitat, discuss how habitat functions to support healthy populations of living things, and develop a habitat concept designed to inform urban practitioners who lack high-quality biological information on local biodiversity.
Articulate the benefits of biodiversity in terms of public health, economic well-being and civic life. Formulate strategies for quantifying and communicating these benefits to government and public stakeholders.
We explore strategies for quantifying the value of biodiversity and green spaces in terms of public health, economic well-being, and improvements to civic life. We examine case studies of green space valuation and develop a general framework for data-informed valuation.
We develop general concepts for using data in urban biodiversity strategy, focusing in depth on the Singapore Index on Cities’ Biodiversity. We explore indicator development, data research, data sharing and acquisition, data safety and governance, data interpretation, and communication of data insights.