Publications

Peng, J; Ma, J; Liu, QY; Liu, YX; Hu, YN; Li, YR; Yue, YM (2018). Spatial-temporal change of land surface temperature across 285 cities in China: An urban-rural contrast perspective. SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 635, 487-497.

Abstract
As an important theme in global climate change and urban sustainable development, the changes of land surface temperature (LST) and surface urban heat island (SUHI) have beenmore and more focused by urban ecologists. This study used land-use data to identify the urban-rural areas in 285 cities in China and comparatively analyzed LST in urban-rural areas with the perspective of spatial-temporal dynamics heterogeneity. The results showed that, 98.9% of the cities exhibited SUHI effect in summer nighttime and the effect was stronger in northern cities than that in southern cities. In 2010, themean SUHI intensitywas the largest in summer daytime, with 4.6% of the cities having extreme SUHI of over 4 degrees C. From 2001 to 2010, the nighttime LST of most cities increased more quickly in urban areas compared with rural areas, with an increasing tendency of the urban-rural LST difference. The difference in the urban-rural LST change rate was concentrated in the range of 0-0.1 degrees C/year for 68.0% of cities in winter and 70.8% of cities in summer. For the higher LST increasing in urban areas compared with rural areas, thereweremore cities in summer thanwinter, indicating that the summer nighttimewas the key temporal period for SUHImanagement. Based on the change slope of urban-rural LST, cities were clustered into four types and the vital and major zones for urban thermal environment management were identified in China. The vital zone included cities in Hunan, Hubei and other central rising provinces as well as the Beibu Gulf of Guangxi Province. The major zone included most of the cities in Central Plain Urban Agglomeration, Yangtze River Delta and Pearl River Delta. These results can provide scientific basis for SUHI adaptation in China. (C) 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

DOI:
10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.04.105

ISSN:
0048-9697