The post-effects of landscape practices on spontaneous plants in urban parks

IF 6 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES Urban Forestry & Urban Greening Pub Date : 2025-02-25 DOI:10.1016/j.ufug.2025.128744
Chundi Chen , Ruobing Wang , Mingkun Chen , Juanjuan Zhao , He Li , Maria Ignatieva , Weiqi Zhou
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Abstract

Urban ecosystems, initially shaped by landscape practices (planning, design, construction and management of outdoor environments), continue to evolve under these influences. This dynamic process results in long-term ecological impacts and fosters complex biodiversity patterns, characterized by the co-existence of both cultivated and spontaneous species. While current literature predominantly focuses on broader land use/cover patterns and changes, there is insufficient attention to the indirect and secondary impacts on urban biodiversity that follow initial landscape practices. Using 38 urban parks in a high-density of built-up city, Shanghai, China as an example, this study examines how specific landscape practices, leave a lasting imprint on urban flora, particularly spontaneous plant species that thrive post-intervention. To better understand the impacts of different data types (e.g. compositional data), a suite of Mantel tests, Canonical Correspondence Analysis and Variance Partitioning Analysis was used at two design scales: the whole park and the finer, site scale. This study identifies 211 spontaneous plant species in 169 genera from 82 families. At the whole park scale, park area had the most significant positive correlation with spontaneous plant diversity, whereas patch density primarily influenced spontaneous plant composition. The study shows the crucial role of the “natural” landscape design style in fostering spontaneous plant diversity. At the site scale, factors related to water conditions, such as vertical stratification of the community, low-lying and canopy cover percentage, significantly impact the diversity and composition of spontaneous plant species. Importantly, our study reveals that cultivated plant species significantly influence the diversity of spontaneous plant assemblages, suggesting positive interactions at the whole park scale but shifting to negative interplays at the site scale. Our work facilitates a better understanding of the forces that (re)shape and determine the structural and functional attributes of an urban novel ecosystem and can inform landscape design to optimize urban biodiversity conservation.
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景观实践对城市公园自生植物的后效应
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来源期刊
CiteScore
11.70
自引率
12.50%
发文量
289
审稿时长
70 days
期刊介绍: Urban Forestry and Urban Greening is a refereed, international journal aimed at presenting high-quality research with urban and peri-urban woody and non-woody vegetation and its use, planning, design, establishment and management as its main topics. Urban Forestry and Urban Greening concentrates on all tree-dominated (as joint together in the urban forest) as well as other green resources in and around urban areas, such as woodlands, public and private urban parks and gardens, urban nature areas, street tree and square plantations, botanical gardens and cemeteries. The journal welcomes basic and applied research papers, as well as review papers and short communications. Contributions should focus on one or more of the following aspects: -Form and functions of urban forests and other vegetation, including aspects of urban ecology. -Policy-making, planning and design related to urban forests and other vegetation. -Selection and establishment of tree resources and other vegetation for urban environments. -Management of urban forests and other vegetation. Original contributions of a high academic standard are invited from a wide range of disciplines and fields, including forestry, biology, horticulture, arboriculture, landscape ecology, pathology, soil science, hydrology, landscape architecture, landscape planning, urban planning and design, economics, sociology, environmental psychology, public health, and education.
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Editorial Board Understanding street tree inequities: The interrelation of urban layout and socio-economics How to quantify multidimensional perception of urban parks? Integrating deep learning-based social media data analysis with questionnaire survey methods The contribution of geolocated data to the diagnosis of urban green infrastructure. Tenerife insularity as a benchmark Plant smellscape: A key avenue to connect nature and human well-being
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