Pautasso Marco, McKinney Michael L
Division of Biology, Imperial College London, Wye Campus, High Street, Wye, Kent, TN25 5AH, United Kingdom.
Conserv Biol. 2007 Oct;21(5):1333-40. doi: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2007.00760.x.
The "botanist effect" is thought to be the reason for higher plant species richness in areas where botanists are disproportionately present as an artefactual consequence of a more thorough sampling. We examined whether this was the case for U.S. counties. We collated the number of species of vascular plants, human population size, and the area of U.S. counties. Controlling for spatial autocorrelation and county area, plant species richness increased with human population size and density in counties with and without universities and/or botanical gardens, with no significant differences in the relation between the two subsets. This is consistent with previous findings and further evidence of a broad-scale positive correlation between species richness and human population presence, which has important consequences for the experience of nature by inhabitants of densely populated regions. Combined with the many reports of a negative correlation between the two variables at a local scale, the positive relation between plant species richness in U.S. counties and human population presence stresses the need for the conservation of seminatural areas in urbanized ecosystems and for the containment of urban and suburban sprawl.
“植物学家效应”被认为是在植物学家分布不成比例的地区植物物种丰富度较高的原因,这是更全面采样的人为结果。我们研究了美国各县是否也是这种情况。我们整理了美国各县维管植物的物种数量、人口规模和面积。在控制空间自相关和县域面积的情况下,无论县内有无大学和/或植物园,植物物种丰富度都随人口规模和密度的增加而增加,两个子集之间的关系没有显著差异。这与之前的研究结果一致,进一步证明了物种丰富度与人口存在之间存在广泛的正相关,这对人口密集地区居民的自然体验具有重要影响。结合许多关于这两个变量在局部尺度上呈负相关的报道,美国各县植物物种丰富度与人口存在之间的正相关强调了在城市化生态系统中保护半自然区域以及遏制城市和郊区扩张的必要性。