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A comprehensive sustainability appraisal of water governance in Phoenix, AZ.

artículo científico

A multi-city comparison of front and backyard differences in plant species diversity and nitrogen cycling in residential landscapes

artículo científico publicado en 2018

Adaptation, exposure, and politics: Local extreme heat and global climate change risk perceptions in the phoenix metropolitan region, USA

artículo científico publicado en 2022

Ambiguity and clarity in residential yard ordinances across metropolitan areas in the United States

artículo científico publicado en 2021

Anger and Sadness: Gendered Emotional Responses to Climate Threats in Four Island Nations

artículo científico publicado en 2018

Assessing the homogenization of urban land management with an application to US residential lawn care

artículo científico publicado en 2014

Climate Change as an Involuntary Exposure: A Comparative Risk Perception Study from Six Countries across the Global Development Gradient

artículo científico publicado en 2020

Climate and lawn management interact to control C4 plant distribution in residential lawns across seven U.S. cities

scientific article published on 01 April 2019

Continental-scale homogenization of residential lawn plant communities

article

Drivers of plant species richness and phylogenetic composition in urban yards at the continental scale

artículo científico publicado en 2018

Ecological homogenization of residential macrosystems

scientific article published on 22 June 2017

Ecological homogenization of urban USA

artículo científico publicado en 2014

Ecosystem Processes and Human Influences Regulate Streamflow Response to Climate Change at Long-Term Ecological Research Sites

article

Emotion, Coping, and Climate Change in Island Nations: Implications for Environmental Justice

artículo científico publicado en 2017

Environmental attitudes predict native plant abundance in residential yards

artículo científico publicado en 2022

Examining the potential to expand wildlife-supporting residential yards and gardens

artículo científico publicado en 2022

Gendered Perspectives About Water Risks and Policy Strategies: A Tripartite Conceptual Approach

artículo científico publicado en 2010

Heterogeneity in Residential Yard Care: Evidence from Boston, Miami, and Phoenix

artículo científico publicado en 2012

How do heat and flood risk drive residential green infrastructure implementation in Phoenix, Arizona?

artículo científico publicado en 2021

How the Nonhuman World Influences Homeowner Yard Management in the American Residential Macrosystem

artículo científico

Human–Wildlife Interactions and Coexistence in an Urban Desert Environment

artículo científico publicado en 2023

Insatiable Thirst and a Finite Supply: An Assessment of Municipal Water-Conservation Policy in Greater Phoenix, Arizona, 1980–2007

Linking yard plant diversity to homeowners’ landscaping priorities across the U.S

scientific article published on 23 December 2019

Municipal regulation of residential landscapes across US cities: Patterns and implications for landscape sustainability

artículo científico publicado en 2020

Participants and non-participants of place-based groups: an assessment of attitudes and implications for public participation in water resource management

scientific article published on 11 June 2007

Predicting the assembly of novel communities in urban ecosystems

artículo científico publicado en 2020

Research Article: Envisioning the Future of Water Governance: A Survey of Central Arizona Water Decision Makers

scholarly article by Dave D. White et al published March 2015 in Environmental Practice

Residential household yard care practices along urban-exurban gradients in six climatically-diverse U.S. metropolitan areas

artículo científico publicado en 2019

Residential landscapes as social-ecological systems: a synthesis of multi-scalar interactions between people and their home environment

artículo científico publicado en 2011

Residential yard management and landscape cover affect urban bird community diversity across the continental USA

artículo científico publicado en 2021

Residents manage dynamic plant communities: Change over time in urban vegetation

artículo científico publicado en 2022

Residents' yard choices and rationales in a desert city: social priorities, ecological impacts, and decision tradeoffs

artículo científico publicado en 2009

Satisfaction, water and fertilizer use in the American residential macrosystem

Species traits explain public perceptions of human–bird interactions

artículo científico publicado en 2022

Stressors and Strategies for Managing Urban Water Scarcity: Perspectives from the Field

Taxonomic, phylogenetic, and functional composition and homogenization of residential yard vegetation with contrasting management

artículo científico publicado en 2020

The Influence of Diverse Values, Ecological Structure, and Geographic Context on Residents’ Multifaceted Landscaping Decisions

artículo científico publicado en 2010

The more things change: species losses detected in Phoenix despite stability in bird–socioeconomic relationships

artículo científico

To the rescue—Evaluating the social-ecological patterns for bird intakes

artículo científico publicado en 2021

Towards Water Sensitive Cities in the Colorado River Basin: A Comparative Historical Analysis to Inform Future Urban Water Sustainability Transitions

Urban plant diversity in Los Angeles, California: Species and functional type turnover in cultivated landscapes

artículo científico publicado en 2019

Vulnerability of water systems to the effects of climate change and urbanization: a comparison of Phoenix, Arizona and Portland, Oregon (USA).

artículo científico publicado en 2013

Water, People, and Sustainability—A Systems Framework for Analyzing and Assessing Water Governance Regimes

scholarly article by Arnim Wiek & Kelli L. Larson published 1 June 2012 in Water Resources Management

Wealth and urbanization shape medium and large terrestrial mammal communities

artículo científico publicado en 2021

Why Land Planners and Water Managers Don't Talk to One Another and Why They Should!

scientific article published on 19 October 2012