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. 2020 Oct 2;15(10):e0240061.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0240061. eCollection 2020.

Ground-dwelling invertebrate diversity in domestic gardens along a rural-urban gradient: Landscape characteristics are more important than garden characteristics

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Ground-dwelling invertebrate diversity in domestic gardens along a rural-urban gradient: Landscape characteristics are more important than garden characteristics

Brigitte Braschler et al. PLoS One. .

Abstract

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.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Figures

Fig 1
Fig 1. Effects of urbanisation (distance to city centre; three classes), garden size (area with vegetation; three classes) and local garden characteristics on the species richness of six groups of invertebrates.
Plots show significant responses (P < 0.05) from GLMs (see Model 1 in S7 Table for more details). P-values for the response of the GLMs are shown. Displayed are deviance residuals for species richness from full models after stepwise reduction omitting the respective factor. This procedure corrected for other factors in the GLM. For native plant species richness, habitat richness and structural diversity, residuals from regressions of these factors on total garden area were used, because all three variables were correlated with garden size. Positive values in the bar plots indicate a higher than expected species richness. “–”indicates factors that were omitted from the models in the stepwise procedure. “ns” indicates factors that were retained in the model, but were not significant. For each family only represented by juvenile spiders, which were not identified to species level, we added an extra species to the count for the category spiders supplemented.
Fig 2
Fig 2
Results of constrained analyses of principle coordinates visualizing similarities in species compositions of gastropods (a), spiders (b), millipedes (c), woodlice (d), ants (e), and rove beetles (f) in gardens located at different distances to the city centre (three classes; dark blue refers to gardens in the centre of the city, blue to gardens at intermediate distance and light blue to gardens at long distance from the city centre).

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