The Impact of Urbanization on Taxonomic Diversity and Functional Similarity among Butterfly Communities in Waterfront Green Spaces

Author:

Fang Wenqiang1,Lin Xiaoqian12,Lin Ying1,Huang Shanjun1,Huang Jingkai1,Fan Shiyuan1,Ran Chengyu1,Dang Emily3,Lin Yuxin1,Fu Weicong12

Affiliation:

1. College of Landscape Architecture and Art, Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, 15 Shangxiadian Rd., Fuzhou 350000, China

2. Engineering Research Center for Forest Park of National Forestry and Grassland Administration, 15 Shangxiadian Rd., Fuzhou 350002, China

3. Faculty of Forestry, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada

Abstract

Urbanization has been shown to cause biodiversity loss. However, its effects on butterfly taxonomic and functional diversity still need to be studied, especially in urban waterfront green spaces where mechanisms of impact still need to be explored. We used butterflies as indicators to study how urbanization affects their taxonomic and functional diversity and identify indicator species in different urban ecological gradient areas. From July to September 2022, we surveyed 10 urban waterfront green spaces in Fuzhou City, China. We recorded 1163 butterflies of 28 species from 6 families. First, we explored the effects of urbanization on butterfly communities and made pairwise comparisons of different urban ecological gradients (α-diversity); secondly, we looked for differences between butterfly communities across urban ecological gradients (β-diversity); finally, we investigated differences in the response of butterfly functional groups to different urban ecological gradient areas and identified ecological indicative species. This study found the following: (1) Urbanization has led to the simplification of butterfly community structure, but there are also favorable factors that support the survival of individual butterflies; (2) Urbanization has led to significant differences in butterfly communities and plant-feeding polyphagous butterfly groups; (3) Urbanization has led to differences in the functional diversity of butterfly diet and activity space groups; (4) We identified five eco-indicator species in different urban ecological gradients.

Funder

Green Urbanization across China and Europe: Collaborative Research on Key Technological Advances in Urban Forests

Horizon 2020 strategic plan: CLEARING HOUSE—Collaborative Learning in Research, Infor-nation sharing, and Governance on How Urban tree-based solutions support Sino-European urban futures

National Non-Profit Research Institutions of the Chinese Academy of Forestry

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Insect Science

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