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Erschienen in: Urban Ecosystems 3/2007

01.09.2007

Effects of urbanization on butterfly species richness, guild structure, and rarity

verfasst von: Peter J. Clark, J. Michael Reed, Frances S. Chew

Erschienen in: Urban Ecosystems | Ausgabe 3/2007

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Abstract

We evaluated the effects of landscape characteristics associated with urbanization, as well as local features, on butterfly species richness at four spatial scales (50, 150, 500, and 1,000 m from survey plots). We also evaluated these effects separately by butterfly guilds based on their region-wide rarity and on degree of specialization. The distribution of abundances of the 44 species observed showed an excess of uncommon species compared to a log-normal distribution, and the two most abundant species were exotic (Thymelicus lineola and Pieris rapae). We used an information theoretic approach to model selection to determine the most important correlates of butterfly species richness. Models of mean butterfly richness per visit explained greater variance than did models of cumulative richness across the season. Cumulative butterfly species richness was affected more at larger spatial scales, while richness per visit was affected similarly at all spatial scales. The most consistent local factor affecting butterfly diversity was the number of nectar producing plants that were flowering. The most consistent landscape-level correlates of species richness were number of people (at small spatial scales) and green space. Measures of increased urbanization were associated with decreased butterfly species richness, and rare and specialized species were most affected. Species that were regionally rare, and those that specialized both in host plants and had few broods, disappeared with declining richness across sites 2.9–4.5 times faster than did generalists and less restricted specialists.

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Metadaten
Titel
Effects of urbanization on butterfly species richness, guild structure, and rarity
verfasst von
Peter J. Clark
J. Michael Reed
Frances S. Chew
Publikationsdatum
01.09.2007
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Urban Ecosystems / Ausgabe 3/2007
Print ISSN: 1083-8155
Elektronische ISSN: 1573-1642
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11252-007-0029-4

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