Literature DB >> 33168154

Urban Biodiversity and the Importance of Scale.

Kenta Uchida1, Rachel V Blakey2, Joseph R Burger3, Daniel S Cooper1, Chase A Niesner1, Daniel T Blumstein4.   

Abstract

Many ecological and evolutionary processes are affected by urbanization, but cities vary by orders of magnitude in their human population size and areal extent. To quantify and manage urban biodiversity, one must understand both how biodiversity scales with city size, and how ecological, evolutionary, and socioeconomic drivers of biodiversity scale with city size. We show how environmental abiotic and biotic drivers, as well as human cultural and socioeconomic drivers, may act through ecological and evolutionary processes differently, at different scales, to influence patterns in urban biodiversity. Because relationships likely take linear and nonlinear forms, the need to describe the specific scaling relationships is highlighted, including deviations and potential inflection points, where different management strategies may successfully conserve urban biodiversity.
Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  biodiversity; city; cultural processes; eco-evolutionary processes; scaling

Year:  2020        PMID: 33168154     DOI: 10.1016/j.tree.2020.10.011

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Trends Ecol Evol        ISSN: 0169-5347            Impact factor:   17.712


  1 in total

1.  Anthropogenic Intensity-Determined Assembly and Network Stability of Bacterioplankton Communities in the Le'an River.

Authors:  Bobo Wu; Peng Wang; Adam Thomas Devlin; Yuanyang She; Jun Zhao; Yang Xia; Yi Huang; Lu Chen; Hua Zhang; Minghua Nie; Mingjun Ding
Journal:  Front Microbiol       Date:  2022-05-04       Impact factor: 5.640

  1 in total

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