Section of Conservation Biology, Department of Environmental Sciences, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland.
Department of Ecology, Technische Universität Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
PLoS One. 2020 Oct 2;15(10):e0240061. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0240061. eCollection 2020.
Urbanisation is increasing worldwide and is regarded a major driver of environmental change altering local species assemblages. Private domestic gardens contribute a significant share of total green area in cities, but their biodiversity has received relatively little attention. Previous studies mainly considered plants, flying invertebrates such as bees and butterflies, and birds. By using a multi-taxa approach focused on less mobile, ground-dwelling invertebrates, we examined the influence of local garden characteristics and landscape characteristics on species richness and abundance of gastropods, spiders, millipedes, woodlice, ants, ground beetles and rove beetles. We assume that most of the species of these groups are able to complete their entire life cycle within a single garden. We conducted field surveys in thirty-five domestic gardens along a rural-urban gradient in Basel, Switzerland. Considered together, the gardens examined harboured an impressive species richness, with a mean share of species of the corresponding groups known for Switzerland of 13.9%, ranging from 4.7% in ground beetles to 23.3% in woodlice. The overall high biodiversity is a result of complementary contributions of gardens harbouring distinct species assemblages. Indeed, at the garden level, species richness of different taxonomical groups were typically not inter-correlated. The exception was ant species richness, which was correlated with those of gastropods and spiders. Generalised linear models revealed that distance to the city centre is an important driver of species richness, abundance and composition of several groups, resulting in an altered species composition in gardens in the centre of the city. Local garden characteristics were important drivers of gastropod and ant species richness, and the abundance of spiders, millipedes and rove beetles. Our study shows that domestic gardens make a valuable contribution to regional biodiversity. Thus, domestic urban gardens constitute an important part of green infrastructure, which should be considered by urban planners.
城市化正在全球范围内加剧,被认为是改变当地物种组合的主要环境变化驱动因素。私人家庭花园在城市中的总绿地面积中占有很大份额,但它们的生物多样性却相对较少受到关注。以前的研究主要考虑了植物、蜜蜂和蝴蝶等飞行无脊椎动物以及鸟类。通过使用一种多分类群的方法,重点关注移动性较低的地面无脊椎动物,我们研究了当地花园特征和景观特征对腹足动物、蜘蛛、千足虫、鼠妇、蚂蚁、步甲和隐翅虫物种丰富度和数量的影响。我们假设这些类群的大多数物种能够在单个花园内完成其整个生命周期。我们在瑞士巴塞尔的农村-城市梯度沿线的 35 个家庭花园中进行了实地调查。总的来说,检查过的花园拥有令人印象深刻的物种丰富度,相应组别的物种平均份额为瑞士已知物种的 13.9%,范围从步甲的 4.7%到鼠妇的 23.3%。这种整体的高生物多样性是由具有不同物种组合的花园的互补贡献所产生的。实际上,在花园层面上,不同分类群的物种丰富度通常没有相互关联。蚂蚁物种丰富度是个例外,它与腹足动物和蜘蛛的物种丰富度相关。广义线性模型表明,到市中心的距离是多个类群物种丰富度、数量和组成的重要驱动因素,导致市中心花园的物种组成发生变化。当地花园特征是腹足动物和蚂蚁物种丰富度以及蜘蛛、千足虫和隐翅虫数量的重要驱动因素。我们的研究表明,家庭花园对区域生物多样性做出了有价值的贡献。因此,家庭城市花园是绿色基础设施的重要组成部分,城市规划者应该考虑到这一点。