Idiosyncrasies in cities: evaluating patterns and drivers of ant biodiversity along urbanization gradients

Author:

Perez Abe1ORCID,Diamond Sarah E1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, Case Western Reserve University, 2080 Adelbert Road, Cleveland, OH, USA

Abstract

Abstract Urbanization is expected to reduce biodiversity. However, an increasing number of studies report urban biodiversity comparable to that of surrounding nonurban areas, leaving open the question: what maintains biodiversity in cities? We characterized patterns of ant biodiversity across urbanization gradients of three major cities in the Midwestern United States and evaluated the support for two mechanisms underlying the maintenance of biodiversity in cities, specifically via introduced non-native species and differential phenology of communities along each urbanization gradient. We observed idiosyncrasies in ant species diversity such that each city displayed either increased, decreased or no change in biodiversity across the urbanization gradient. We found partial support (one of the three cities) for the hypothesis that non-native species can contribute positively to overall species diversity in cities, though even with introduced species removed from consideration, native ant biodiversity was maintained along the urbanization gradient. We found no support for systematic differential phenology across urbanization gradients, although species diversity did vary over time across all sites. Our results further challenge the assumption of biodiversity loss in cities, as two of our three cities exhibited maintained species diversity along the urbanization gradient. Most importantly, our study demonstrates that urban biodiversity can be maintained entirely by native communities.

Funder

Ohio Biological Survey

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Urban Studies,Ecology

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