Centre for Bee Ecology, Evolution and Conservation, York University, Canada.
Dept of Biology, York University, Canada.
PLoS One. 2024 Nov 15;19(11):e0312143. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0312143. eCollection 2024.
Cities are complex socioecological systems, yet most urban ecology research does not include the influence of social processes on ecological outcomes. Much of the research that does address social processes focuses primarily on their effects on biotic community composition, with less attention paid to how social processes affect species interactions. Linking social processes to ecological outcomes is complicated by high spatial heterogeneity in cities and the potential for scale mismatch between social and ecological processes, and the indicators used to assess those processes. Here, we assessed how social and ecological processes jointly influence the frequency and outcomes of species interactions among the native perennial vine Gelsemium sempervirens and its insect pollinators, nectar robbers, and florivores across 28 residential subdivisions in the Research Triangle region, NC, USA. We integrated data on socioeconomic attributes (mean property value, mean property size, subdivision age), vegetation attributes (forest cover and richness and density of managed and unmanaged floral resources), species interactions (conspecific and heterospecific pollen deposition, nectar robbing, florivory), and Gelsemium reproduction (fruit set, seeds per fruit) using structural equation modeling to understand the causal links between socioeconomic attributes, vegetation attributes, and interaction frequency and outcome. Among socioeconomic attributes, property value was the strongest predictor of interaction frequency, having both direct and vegetation-mediated indirect effects on pollination and florivory. However, the effect of socioeconomic attributes on plant reproduction was small. Overall, we were able to explain only a small amount of the variation in any species interaction or reproduction measure. This may be due to the functional similarity of subdivisions, despite large variation in both socioeconomic and vegetation attributes, or may reflect scale mismatch between the ecological and socioeconomic variables. Our findings highlight the need to develop scale-appropriate indicators to improve our understanding of the links between social and ecological processes in urban landscapes.
城市是复杂的社会生态系统,但大多数城市生态学研究都没有包括社会过程对生态结果的影响。许多确实涉及社会过程的研究主要关注它们对生物群落组成的影响,而较少关注社会过程如何影响物种相互作用。将社会过程与生态结果联系起来是复杂的,因为城市的空间异质性很高,社会和生态过程之间存在潜在的尺度不匹配,以及用于评估这些过程的指标。在这里,我们评估了社会和生态过程如何共同影响原产多年生藤本植物钩吻及其传粉昆虫、蜜露掠夺者和食花动物在北卡罗来纳州研究三角区 28 个住宅分区中的物种相互作用的频率和结果。我们综合了社会经济属性(平均物业价值、平均物业面积、分区年龄)、植被属性(森林覆盖和管理和非管理花卉资源的丰富度和密度)、物种相互作用(同种和异种花粉沉积、蜜露掠夺、食花)和钩吻繁殖(结实率、每果种子数)的数据,使用结构方程模型来理解社会经济属性、植被属性与相互作用频率和结果之间的因果关系。在社会经济属性中,物业价值是相互作用频率的最强预测因子,对传粉和食花既有直接影响,也有通过植被的间接影响。然而,社会经济属性对植物繁殖的影响很小。总的来说,我们只能解释任何物种相互作用或繁殖措施变化的一小部分。这可能是由于尽管社会经济和植被属性存在很大差异,但分区的功能相似,或者可能反映了生态和社会经济变量之间的尺度不匹配。我们的研究结果强调需要开发适合规模的指标,以提高我们对城市景观中社会和生态过程之间联系的理解。