Biotic homogenization of three insect groups due to urbanization

被引:140
|
作者
Knop, Eva [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Bern, Dept Community Ecol, Inst Ecol & Evolut, CH-3012 Bern, Switzerland
关键词
arthropods; Auchenorrhyncha; beta-diversity; biodiversity; Coleoptera; Heteroptera; nestedness; urbanization; SPECIES RICHNESS; BETA-DIVERSITY; URBAN FLORAS; BIODIVERSITY; PATTERNS; TURNOVER; SIMILARITY; COMPONENTS; INVASION; DISTANCE;
D O I
10.1111/gcb.13091
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
Cities are growing rapidly, thereby expected to cause a large-scale global biotic homogenization. Evidence for the homogenization hypothesis is mostly derived from plants and birds, whereas arthropods have so far been neglected. Here, I tested the homogenization hypothesis with three insect indicator groups, namely true bugs, leafhoppers, and beetles. In particular, I was interested whether insect species community composition differs between urban and rural areas, whether they are more similar between cities than between rural areas, and whether the found pattern is explained by true species turnover, species diversity gradients and geographic distance, by non-native or specialist species, respectively. I analyzed insect species communities sampled on birch trees in a total of six Swiss cities and six rural areas nearby. In all indicator groups, urban and rural community composition was significantly dissimilar due to native species turnover. Further, for bug and leafhopper communities, I found evidence for large-scale homogenization due to urbanization, which was driven by reduced species turnover of specialist species in cities. Species turnover of beetle communities was similar between cities and rural areas. Interestingly, when specialist species of beetles were excluded from the analyses, cities were more dissimilar than rural areas, suggesting biotic differentiation of beetle communities in cities. Non-native species did not affect species turnover of the insect groups. However, given non-native arthropod species are increasing rapidly, their homogenizing effect might be detected more often in future. Overall, the results show that urbanization has a negative large-scale impact on the diversity specialist species of the investigated insect groups. Specific measures in cities targeted at increasing the persistence of specialist species typical for the respective biogeographic region could help to stop the loss of biodiversity.
引用
收藏
页码:228 / 236
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Urbanization as a major cause of biotic homogenization
    McKinney, ML
    [J]. BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 2006, 127 (03) : 247 - 260
  • [2] Urbanization drives biotic homogenization of the avian community in China
    Deng, Jiewen
    Zhu, Younan
    Luo, Yuelong
    Zhong, Yongjing
    Tu, Jiahao
    Yu, Jiehua
    He, Jiekun
    [J]. INTEGRATIVE ZOOLOGY, 2024,
  • [3] Urbanization increases biotic homogenization of zooplankton communities in tropical reservoirs
    Liu, Ping
    Xu, Shaolin
    Lin, Jianhao
    Li, Huiming
    Lin, Qiuqi
    Han, Bo-Ping
    [J]. ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS, 2020, 110
  • [4] Biotic homogenization at the community scale: disentangling the roles of urbanization and plant invasion
    Trentanovi, Giovanni
    von der Lippe, Moritz
    Sitzia, Tommaso
    Ziechmann, Ulrike
    Kowarik, Ingo
    Cierjacks, Arne
    [J]. DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS, 2013, 19 (07) : 738 - 748
  • [5] Urbanization causes biotic homogenization of woodland bird communities at multiple spatial scales
    Sidemo-Holm, William
    Ekroos, Johan
    Garcia, Santiago Reina
    Soderstrom, Bo
    Hedblom, Marcus
    [J]. GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2022, 28 (21) : 6152 - 6164
  • [6] Effects of urbanization, biotic and abiotic factors on aquatic insect diversity in urban ponds
    Keinath, Silvia
    Onandia, Gabriela
    Griesbaum, Frederic
    Roedel, Mark-Oliver
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2023, 11
  • [7] Clarifying biotic homogenization
    Olden, JD
    Poff, NL
    [J]. TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION, 2004, 19 (06) : 283 - 284
  • [8] On defining and quantifying biotic homogenization
    Olden, JD
    Rooney, TP
    [J]. GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2006, 15 (02): : 113 - 120
  • [9] Biotic homogenization and conservation prioritization
    Rooney, Thomas P.
    Olden, Julian D.
    Leach, Mark K.
    Rogers, David A.
    [J]. BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 2007, 134 (03) : 447 - 450
  • [10] The human dimensions of biotic homogenization
    Olden, JD
    Douglas, ME
    Douglas, MR
    [J]. CONSERVATION BIOLOGY, 2005, 19 (06) : 2036 - 2038