Patterns in tree squirrel co-occurrence vary with responses to local land cover in US cities

IF 2.5 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION Urban Ecosystems Pub Date : 2024-07-18 DOI:10.1007/s11252-024-01581-7
Rachel N. Larson, Heather A. Sander, Mason Fidino, Julia L. Angstmann, Sheryl Hayes Hursh, Seth B. Magle, Katrina Moore, Carmen M. Salsbury, Theodore Stankowich, Katherine Tombs, Lauren Barczak, Alyssa M. Davidge, David Drake, Laurel Hartley, Pamela Reed Sanchez, Andrew Robey, Tom Snyder, Jacque Williamson, Amanda J. Zellmer
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Abstract

Urbanization has important effects on the distribution and persistence of wildlife communities. Urbanization may alter not just the distributions of individual species, but also co-occurrence patterns and thus the potential for interspecific interactions (e.g., competition, predation) that structure wildlife communities. Little is currently known about how urbanization alters species co-occurrence or how these changes shape urban species assemblages. Using tree squirrels as a model functional group, we quantified how urbanization alters species occurrence and co-occurrence patterns to shape species assemblages, and how these effects vary within and among cities. We constructed a multi-species, multi-season occupancy model to identify relationships between tree squirrel occupancy and co-occurrence and local land and tree canopy cover and examined variation in these relationships within and among nine US cities. Species’ responses to canopy cover were highly variable among, but less variable within cities, suggesting that even common urban wildlife species may respond differently to urban intensity in different landscape contexts. Species co-occurrence was also highly variable among cities and weakly related to canopy cover within a city. These findings provide important evidence that both environmental attributes and species interactions shape urban wildlife communities. Important for management and conservation, they suggest that tree-canopy cover can particularly support forest species co-occurrence and that managing urban forests to provide high canopy cover could contribute to the diversity of urban wildlife communities in forested ecoregions.

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美国城市中树上松鼠的共同出现模式随当地土地植被的变化而变化
城市化对野生生物群落的分布和持久性有重要影响。城市化不仅可能改变单个物种的分布,还可能改变物种的共存模式,从而改变物种间相互作用(如竞争、捕食)的可能性,从而构建野生生物群落。目前,人们对城市化如何改变物种共存或这些变化如何塑造城市物种群落知之甚少。我们以树上松鼠为功能群模型,量化了城市化如何改变物种出现和共生模式,从而形成物种群落,以及这些影响在城市内部和城市之间的差异。我们构建了一个多物种、多季节占用模型,以确定树松鼠占用率和共存率与当地土地和树木冠层覆盖率之间的关系,并研究了这些关系在美国九个城市内部和城市之间的变化。物种对树冠覆盖率的反应在城市之间变化很大,但在城市内部变化较小,这表明即使是常见的城市野生动物物种也可能在不同的景观环境中对城市强度做出不同的反应。物种的共同出现率在不同城市之间也存在很大差异,而在城市内部则与树冠覆盖率关系不大。这些发现提供了重要的证据,表明环境属性和物种相互作用共同塑造了城市野生生物群落。这些发现对管理和保护具有重要意义,它们表明树冠覆盖率尤其能支持森林物种的共生,管理城市森林以提供高树冠覆盖率能促进森林生态区城市野生生物群落的多样性。
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来源期刊
Urban Ecosystems
Urban Ecosystems BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION-ECOLOGY
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
6.90%
发文量
113
期刊介绍: Urban Ecosystems is an international journal devoted to scientific investigations of urban environments and the relationships between socioeconomic and ecological structures and processes in urban environments. The scope of the journal is broad, including interactions between urban ecosystems and associated suburban and rural environments. Contributions may span a range of specific subject areas as they may apply to urban environments: biodiversity, biogeochemistry, conservation biology, wildlife and fisheries management, ecosystem ecology, ecosystem services, environmental chemistry, hydrology, landscape architecture, meteorology and climate, policy, population biology, social and human ecology, soil science, and urban planning.
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