• Title of article

    Measuring exurban change in the American West: A case study in Gallatin County, Montana, 1973–2004

  • Author/Authors

    Eric Compas، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
  • Pages
    10
  • From page
    56
  • To page
    65
  • Abstract
    Dispersed patterns of rapid rural, or “exurban,” growth in the American West are recognized as key threats to the regionʹs biodiversity through habitat loss and fragmentation. Both planners and ecologists have responded with strategies to minimize the impact of these patterns—strategies which have appeared in local planning policies since the 1990s. This research examined the degree to which these changing policies were effective in changing subdivision patterns in Gallatin County, Montana. Using landscape metrics drawn from landscape ecology and urban sprawl literature, this study tracked changes in metrics across the 1973–2004 time period for regulated subdivision, major and minor, at several spatial scales. The results revealed several distinct trends: (1) major subdivisions became more “clustered” and less land consumptive, (2) minor subdivisions revealed the opposite trend and are recently consuming the more land, (3) distances from existing development decreased for major subdivisions, and (4) increasing numbers of parcels were near or within riparian areas. These findings indicated a differential impact of planning across scales and types of subdivision and a mixed success of planning in mitigating the environmental impacts of rural residential development.
  • Keywords
    Landscape metrics , fragmentation , Rural residential development , Landscape planning , Greater Yellowstone , Land subdivision
  • Journal title
    Landscape and Urban Planning
  • Serial Year
    2007
  • Journal title
    Landscape and Urban Planning
  • Record number

    747573