Dear IUFRO Division 6 colleagues,
We are looking for contributions for a special issue of the journal Arboriculture and
Urban Forestry, on the topic of "Smart Urban Forestry-Digital technologies and data
for planning, design, and management"
Cities are increasingly data-driven, and there is a growing interest in understanding how
citizen engagement, connected technology, and data analytics can support sustainable
development. Evidence has also repeatedly shown that green infrastructure such as urban
forests address diverse urban challenges and are critical components of urban
sustainability and resilience. It is thus timely to assess the role of urban forests and
other green spaces in smart city planning. As technology becomes more ubiquitous in urban
environments, and as pressure to maximize green benefits for all city dwellers rises, it
is worthwhile for researchers and practitioners to consider associated challenges,
opportunities, and implications for tree care and urban forest management. This special
issue of AUF addresses current knowledge gaps by exploring how the planning, design,
management, and use of urban trees, urban forests, and green infrastructure can be
integrated into smart city planning. It will look at how digital technologies can be
jointly used as tools to improve the delivery of forest benefits and enable stakeholder
participation and engagement, for example, through citizen science.
Contributions to this special issue can cover one or more of the following topics:
* Understanding data quality for urban trees: technological challenges and
opportunities.
* New technologies for data collection and data sharing in urban forestry: mobile
applications, web
* dashboards, remote sensing tools and methods (unmanned aerial vehicles, ground-based
sensors, etc).
* Data-driven coproduction of urban forestry knowledge by scientists, managers, and
the public.
* Novel sources of data and new methods for arboricultural and urban forestry
research.
* Uses for and implications of open data in arboricultural and urban forestry
research.
* The role of smartphones and other mobile devices: volunteered geospatial information
for
* design, planning, and management.
* The impact of automation and artificial intelligence on tree care.
* Ethical implications of 'smart approaches' to arboriculture and urban
forestry.
Abstracts are due April 15th and full papers June 1st. Further details are provided in the
attachment.
Kind regards,
Sophie Nitoslawski and Cecil Konijnendijk, guest editors
(Faculty of Forestry, University of British Columbia)