Aronson Myla F J, Nilon Charles H, Lepczyk Christopher A, Parker Tommy S, Warren Paige S, Cilliers Sarel S, Goddard Mark A, Hahs Amy K, Herzog Cecilia, Katti Madhusudan, La Sorte Frank A, Williams Nicholas S G, Zipperer Wayne
Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Natural Resources, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick, New Jersey, 08901, USA.
School of Natural Resources, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri, 65211, USA.
Ecology. 2016 Nov;97(11):2952-2963. doi: 10.1002/ecy.1535.
The majority of humanity now lives in cities or towns, with this proportion expected to continue increasing for the foreseeable future. As novel ecosystems, urban areas offer an ideal opportunity to examine multi-scalar processes involved in community assembly as well as the role of human activities in modulating environmental drivers of biodiversity. Although ecologists have made great strides in recent decades at documenting ecological relationships in urban areas, much remains unknown, and we still need to identify the major ecological factors, aside from habitat loss, behind the persistence or extinction of species and guilds of species in cities. Given this paucity of knowledge, there is an immediate need to facilitate collaborative, interdisciplinary research on the patterns and drivers of biodiversity in cities at multiple spatial scales. In this review, we introduce a new conceptual framework for understanding the filtering processes that mold diversity of urban floras and faunas. We hypothesize that the following hierarchical series of filters influence species distributions in cities: (1) regional climatic and biogeographical factors; (2) human facilitation; (3) urban form and development history; (4) socioeconomic and cultural factors; and (5) species interactions. In addition to these filters, life history and functional traits of species are important in determining community assembly and act at multiple spatial scales. Using these filters as a conceptual framework can help frame future research needed to elucidate processes of community assembly in urban areas. Understanding how humans influence community structure and processes will aid in the management, design, and planning of our cities to best support biodiversity.
如今,大多数人生活在城镇中,且预计在可预见的未来这一比例还会持续上升。作为新型生态系统,城市地区为研究群落构建过程中涉及的多尺度过程以及人类活动在调节生物多样性环境驱动因素中的作用提供了理想契机。尽管近几十年来生态学家在记录城市地区的生态关系方面取得了长足进步,但仍有许多未知之处,我们仍需确定除栖息地丧失之外,城市中物种及其物种群落存续或灭绝背后的主要生态因素。鉴于知识的匮乏,当下迫切需要推动在多个空间尺度上对城市生物多样性模式及驱动因素开展跨学科合作研究。在本综述中,我们引入了一个新的概念框架,用于理解塑造城市动植物多样性的筛选过程。我们假设以下一系列分层筛选因素会影响城市中的物种分布:(1)区域气候和生物地理因素;(2)人类促进作用;(3)城市形态和发展历史;(4)社会经济和文化因素;以及(5)物种间相互作用。除了这些筛选因素外,物种的生活史和功能性状在决定群落构建方面也很重要,并且在多个空间尺度上发挥作用。将这些筛选因素用作概念框架有助于规划未来所需的研究,以阐明城市地区的群落构建过程。了解人类如何影响群落结构和过程将有助于对我们的城市进行管理、设计和规划,从而更好地支持生物多样性。