Department of Biological Sciences, California State University Los Angeles, 5151 State University Drive, Los Angeles, California, 90032, USA.
Ecology, Evolution, and Marine Biology, University of California Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, 93106-9620, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2020 Oct;30(7):e02149. doi: 10.1002/eap.2149. Epub 2020 Jun 11.
Street trees are public resources planted in a municipality's right-of-way and are a considerable component of urban forests throughout the world. Street trees provide numerous benefits to people. However, many metropolitan areas have a poor understanding of the value of street trees to wildlife, which presents a gap in our knowledge of conservation in urban ecosystems. Greater Los Angeles (LA) is a global city harboring one of the most diverse and extensive urban forests on the planet. The vast majority of the urban forest is nonnative in geographic origin, planted throughout LA following the influx of irrigated water in the early 1900s. In addition to its extensive urban forest, LA is home to a high diversity of birds, which utilize the metropolis throughout the annual cycle. The cover of the urban forest, and likely street trees, varies dramatically across a socioeconomic gradient. However, it is unknown how this variability influences avian communities. To understand the importance of street trees to urban avifauna, we documented foraging behavior by birds on native and nonnative street trees across a socioeconomic gradient throughout LA. Affluent communities harbored a unique composition of street trees, including denser and larger trees than lower-income communities, which in turn, attracted nearly five times the density of feeding birds. Foraging birds strongly preferred two native street-tree species as feeding substrates, the coast live oak (Quercus agrifolia) and the California sycamore (Platanus racemosa), and a handful of nonnative tree species, including the Chinese elm (Ulmus parvifolia), the carrotwood (Cupaniopsis anacardioides), and the southern live oak (Quercus virginiana), in greater proportion than their availability throughout the cityscape (two to three times their availability). Eighty-three percent of street-tree species (n = 108, total) were used in a lower proportion than their availability by feeding birds, and nearly all were nonnative in origin. Our findings highlight the positive influence of street trees on urban avifauna. In particular, our results suggest that improved street-tree management in lower-income communities would likely positively benefit birds. Further, our study provides support for the high value of native street-tree species and select nonnative species as important habitat for feeding birds.
街道树木是种植在城市道路上的公共资源,是世界各地城市森林的重要组成部分。街道树木为人们提供了许多好处。然而,许多大都市对街道树木对野生动物的价值认识不足,这是我们对城市生态系统保护知识的一个空白。大洛杉矶(LA)是一个拥有全球最多样化和最广泛城市森林的城市。绝大多数城市森林的地理起源是非本地的,是在 20 世纪初引入灌溉水之后种植在整个洛杉矶的。除了其广泛的城市森林外,洛杉矶还是一个鸟类多样性很高的城市,这些鸟类在整个年度周期内利用大都市。城市森林的覆盖范围,可能还有街道树木,在社会经济梯度上差异很大。然而,这种可变性如何影响鸟类群落尚不清楚。为了了解街道树木对城市鸟类的重要性,我们记录了鸟类在大洛杉矶社会经济梯度上的原生和非原生街道树木上的觅食行为。富裕社区拥有独特的街道树木组成,包括比低收入社区更密集和更大的树木,而这些树木反过来又吸引了近五倍于觅食鸟类的密度。觅食鸟类强烈偏爱两种本地街道树种作为觅食基质,即海岸栎(Quercus agrifolia)和加利福尼亚悬铃木(Platanus racemosa),以及少数几种非本地树种,包括中国榆树(Ulmus parvifolia)、胡萝卜木(Cupaniopsis anacardioides)和南方栎(Quercus virginiana),它们的比例高于整个城市景观中的可用性(比可用性高两到三倍)。83%的街道树种(n=108,总数)的使用比例低于觅食鸟类的可用性,而且几乎都是外来的。我们的发现强调了街道树木对城市鸟类的积极影响。特别是,我们的研究结果表明,改善低收入社区的街道树木管理可能会使鸟类受益。此外,我们的研究为重视原生街道树种和选择非本地树种作为重要觅食鸟类栖息地提供了支持。