Florida Museum of Natural History, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA.
Biodiversity Institute, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA.
Glob Chang Biol. 2024 Mar;30(3):e17241. doi: 10.1111/gcb.17241.
Recent work has shown the decline of insect abundance, diversity and biomass, with potential implications for ecosystem services. These declines are especially pronounced in regions with high human activity, and urbanization is emerging as a significant contributing factor. However, the scale of these declines and the traits that determine variation in species-specific responses remain less well understood, especially in subtropical and tropical regions, where insect diversity is high and urban footprints are rapidly expanding. Here, we surveyed moths across an entire year in protected forested sites across an urbanization gradient to test how caterpillar and adult life stages of subtropical moths (Lepidoptera) are impacted by urbanization. Specifically, we assess how urban development affects the total biomass of caterpillars, abundance of adult moths and quantify how richness and phylogenetic diversity of macro-moths are impacted by urban development. Additionally, we explore how life-history traits condition species' responses to urban development. At the community level, we find that urban development decreases caterpillar biomass and adult moth abundance. We also find sharp declines of adult macro-moths in response to urban development across the phylogeny, leading to a decrease in species richness and phylogenetic diversity in more urban sites. Finally, our study found that smaller macro-moths are less impacted by urban development than larger macro-moths in subtropical environments, perhaps highlighting the tradeoffs of metabolic costs of urban heat favoring smaller moths over the relative benefits of dispersal for larger moths. In summary, our research underscores the far-reaching consequences of urbanization on moths and provides compelling evidence that urban forests alone may not be sufficient to safeguard biodiversity in cities.
最近的研究表明,昆虫的丰度、多样性和生物量都在下降,这可能对生态系统服务产生影响。这些下降在人类活动水平较高的地区尤为明显,而城市化正成为一个重要的促成因素。然而,这些下降的规模以及决定物种特异性反应变化的特征,在亚热带和热带地区仍了解较少,这些地区昆虫多样性高,城市足迹迅速扩大。在这里,我们在整个城市化梯度上的受保护森林地区对全年的飞蛾进行了调查,以测试亚热带飞蛾(鳞翅目)的幼虫和成虫阶段如何受到城市化的影响。具体来说,我们评估城市发展如何影响幼虫的总生物量、成虫飞蛾的丰度,并量化城市发展如何影响大型飞蛾的丰富度和系统发育多样性。此外,我们还探讨了生活史特征如何影响物种对城市发展的反应。在群落水平上,我们发现城市发展减少了幼虫生物量和成虫飞蛾的丰度。我们还发现,随着城市的发展,大型飞蛾的成虫数量急剧下降,导致更城市化地区的物种丰富度和系统发育多样性下降。最后,我们的研究发现,在亚热带环境中,与大型飞蛾相比,小型飞蛾受城市化发展的影响较小,这也许突出了代谢成本权衡的问题,即城市热有利于小型飞蛾,而对于大型飞蛾来说,扩散的相对益处则较小。总之,我们的研究强调了城市化对飞蛾的深远影响,并提供了令人信服的证据表明,城市森林本身可能不足以保护城市的生物多样性。