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Impacts of urban sprawl on species richness of plants,butterflies, gastropods and birds: not only built-up area matters
Authors:Elena D. Concepción  Martin K. Obrist  Marco Moretti  Florian Altermatt  Bruno Baur  Michael P. Nobis
Affiliation:1.WSL Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research,Birmensdorf,Switzerland;2.Eawag: Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology,Dübendorf,Switzerland;3.Institute of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies,University of Zurich,Zürich,Switzerland;4.Section of Conservation Biology, Department of Environmental Sciences,University of Basel,Basel,Switzerland
Abstract:Urban growth is a major factor of global environmental change and has important impacts on biodiversity, such as changes in species composition and biotic homogenization. Most previous studies have focused on effects of urban area as a general measure of urbanization, and on few or single taxa. Here, we analyzed the impacts of the different components of urban sprawl (i.e., scattered and widespread urban growth) on species richness of a variety of taxonomic groups covering mosses, vascular plants, gastropods, butterflies, and birds at the habitat and landscape scales. Besides urban area, we considered the average age, imperviousness, and dispersion degree of urban area, along with human population density, to disentangle the effects of the different components of urban sprawl on biodiversity. The study was carried out in the Swiss Plateau that has undergone substantial urban sprawl in recent decades.Vascular plants and birds showed the strongest responses to urban sprawl, especially at the landscape scale, with non-native and ruderal plants proliferating and common generalist birds increasing at the expense of specialist birds as urban sprawl grew. Overall, urban area had the greatest contribution on such impacts, but additional effects of urban dispersion (i.e., increase of non-native plants) and human population density (i.e., increases of ruderal plants and common generalist birds) were found. Our findings support the hypothesis that negative impacts of urban sprawl on biodiversity can be reduced by compacting urban growth while still avoiding the formation of very densely populated areas.
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