Quan Wei, Sullivan Jon J, Meurk Colin D, Stewart Glenn H
Department of Pest-Management and Conservation, Lincoln University, Lincoln, Canterbury, New Zealand.
Manaaki-Whenua, Landcare Research, Lincoln, Canterbury, New Zealand.
PeerJ. 2021 Mar 26;9:e10588. doi: 10.7717/peerj.10588. eCollection 2021.
A city's planted trees, the great majority of which are in private gardens, play a fundamental role in shaping a city's wild ecology, ecosystem functioning, and ecosystem services. However, studying tree diversity across a city's many thousands of separate private gardens is logistically challenging. After the disastrous 2010-2011 earthquakes in Christchurch, New Zealand, over 7,000 homes were abandoned and a botanical survey of these gardens was contracted by the Government's Canterbury Earthquake Recovery Authority (CERA) prior to buildings being demolished. This unprecedented access to private gardens across the 443.9 hectares 'Residential Red Zone' area of eastern Christchurch is a unique opportunity to explore the composition of trees in private gardens across a large area of a New Zealand city. We analysed these survey data to describe the effects of housing age, socio-economics, human population density, and general soil quality, on tree abundance, species richness, and the proportion of indigenous and exotic species. We found that while most of the tree species were exotic, about half of the individual trees were local native species. There is an increasing realisation of the native tree species values among Christchurch citizens and gardens in more recent areas of housing had a higher proportion of smaller/younger native trees. However, the same sites had proportionately more exotic trees, by species and individuals, amongst their larger planted trees than older areas of housing. The majority of the species, and individuals, of the larger (≥10 cm DBH) trees planted in gardens still tend to be exotic species. In newer suburbs, gardens in wealthy areas had more native trees than gardens from poorer areas, while in older suburbs, poorer areas had more native big trees than wealthy areas. In combination, these describe, in detail unparalleled for at least in New Zealand, how the tree infrastructure of the city varies in space and time. This lays the groundwork for better understanding of how wildlife distribution and abundance, wild plant regeneration, and ecosystem services, are affected by the city's trees.
一个城市种植的树木,其中绝大多数位于私人花园中,在塑造城市的野生生态、生态系统功能和生态系统服务方面发挥着重要作用。然而,对数以千计分散的私人花园中的树木多样性进行研究在后勤保障上具有挑战性。在2010 - 2011年新西兰克赖斯特彻奇发生灾难性地震后,超过7000所房屋被遗弃,在建筑物拆除之前,政府的坎特伯雷地震恢复管理局(CERA)委托对这些花园进行了一次植物调查。此次能够前所未有的进入克赖斯特彻奇东部443.9公顷“住宅红色区域”内的私人花园,是探索新西兰一个大城市大面积私人花园中树木组成的独特机会。我们分析了这些调查数据,以描述房屋年龄、社会经济状况、人口密度和一般土壤质量对树木丰度、物种丰富度以及本土和外来物种比例的影响。我们发现,虽然大多数树种是外来的,但约一半的单株树木是本地本土物种。克赖斯特彻奇市民越来越意识到本土树种的价值,较新住房区域的花园中有更高比例的较小/较年轻的本土树木。然而,与较旧的住房区域相比,相同地点较大树木中按物种和个体计算外来树木的比例更高。花园中种植的较大(胸径≥10厘米)树木的大多数物种和个体仍然倾向于外来物种。在较新的郊区,富裕地区的花园比贫困地区的花园有更多本土树木,而在较旧的郊区,贫困地区比富裕地区有更多本土大树。综合起来,这些至少在新西兰详细描述了城市的树木基础设施在空间和时间上是如何变化的。这为更好地理解野生动物分布和丰度、野生植物再生以及生态系统服务如何受到城市树木的影响奠定了基础。