Quantifying the importance of urban trees to people and nature through tree removal experiments

Author:

Ordóñez Camilo12ORCID,Threlfall Caragh G.34ORCID,Kendal Dave5ORCID,Baumann Jess1,Sonkkila Cherese1,Hochuli Dieter F.4ORCID,van der Ree Rodney16,Fuller Richard A.7ORCID,Davern Melanie8ORCID,Herzog Kelly9,English Alex10,Livesley Stephen J.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Ecosystem and Forest Science, Faculty of Science, Burnley Campus The University of Melbourne Richmond Victoria Australia

2. Department of Geography, Geomatics and Environment University of Toronto at Mississauga Mississauga Ontario Canada

3. School of Natural Sciences Macquarie University Sydney New South Wales Australia

4. School of Life and Environmental Sciences The University of Sydney Camperdown New South Wales Australia

5. Future in Nature Pty Ltd Australia

6. WSP Australia Pty Ltd Melbourne Victoria Australia

7. School of Biological Sciences The University of Queensland St Lucia Queensland Australia

8. Health Place and Society, Centre for Urban Research RMIT University Melbourne Victoria Australia

9. City of Melbourne, Urban Forest & Ecology Melbourne Victoria Australia

10. Open Space Design & Development Moreland City Council Moreland Victoria Australia

Abstract

Abstract Experimentally manipulating urban tree abundance and structure can help explore the complex and reciprocal interactions among people, biodiversity and the services urban forests provide to humans and wildlife. In this study we take advantage of scheduled urban tree removals to experimentally quantify the benefits that urban trees provide to humans and wildlife. Specifically, we aim to understand how trees affect: (1) bird and mammal abundance and diversity, as well as an ecological process (predation); and (2) people's perception responses, such as the importance that people assign to the trees, wildlife and the site. We designed two independent Before‐after‐control‐impact (BACI) experiments based on two sites where tree removals were occurring (impact sites): an urban park and a residential street, both located in the Greater Melbourne Area, Australia. We selected three control sites for each impact site, or four per experiment. Ecological data were collected through field surveys, and social data on people's perceptions through intercept questionnaires among park and street users. Data were analysed using a GLMMs to determine the combined effect of time (before and after) and treatment (impact and controls). At the urban park, the abundance of nectarivorous birds and possums both declined by 62% following tree removal, while invertebrate predation increased by 82.1%. The level of importance people assigned to the urban park and to the trees at the site decreased after tree removal, and people's attitudes towards tree planting became more positive, meaning more people wanted to plant more trees at the site. None of these changes were observed in the street experiment where fewer and smaller trees were removed, suggesting that effects may be highly specific to context, where factors such as tree volume, diversity and arrangement influence the magnitude of social–ecological effects observed. By demonstrating the social–ecological effect of removing urban trees, we provide evidence that urban trees provide critical habitat to urban wildlife and are perceived as an important aspect of the human experience of urban nature. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.

Funder

Australian Research Council

University of Toronto

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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