Abstract
Abstract
Urban greenspaces, including green roofs and ground-level urban habitats provide habitat for insect communities in cities. However, beneficial insect communities likely differ between human-managed habitats because of varying provision of resources and connectivity in these greenspaces. This study examined the insect communities in four extensive green roofs and three non-adjacent, similarly structured, managed ground-level habitats. We detected a high degree of overlap in insect taxa but found moderate differences in overall insect community composition between the green roof and ground-level habitats. While there was no difference in Shannon diversity between green roofs and ground-level habitats, the ground-level habitat had greater insect taxa richness. Although, both green roof and ground-level habitats supported pollinators and natural enemies, ground-level had greater mean pollinator and natural enemy richness and Shannon diversity. Unexpectedly, green roofs intentionally designed using native plants for habitat did not differ from those that used non-native plants in insect community metrics used in this study. These findings suggest that connectivity and structure might play an outsized role in shaping urban insect communities.
Publisher
Research Square Platform LLC
Reference72 articles.
1. Discovery of potent, unsuspected sampling disparities for Malaise and Möricke traps, as shown for Neotropical Cryptini (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae);Aguiar AP;J Insect Conserv,2010
2. Evaluating the effects of kelp (Ascophyllum nodosum), mushroom compost, and slow release fertilizer amendments on the growth, health, survival, and drought tolerance of plants growing on extensive green roofs;Appleby-Jones S,2014
3. Local habitat factors and spatial connectivity jointly shape an urban insect community;Barr AE;Landsc Urban Plann,2021
4. Fitting Linear Mixed-Effects Models Using lme4;Bates D;J Stat Softw,2015
5. Habitat connectivity shapes urban arthropod communities: the key role of green roofs;Braaker S;Ecology,2014