Abstract

Abstract The replacement of natural areas due to urbanisation represents a major threat to wildlife. Wild species may be classified according to their response towards urban areas. Such responses lead to persistence (exploiters and tolerant) or local extinction (avoiders) of species within cities, which in turn contributes to shaping the assemblages found therein, usually according to specific sets of ecological and morphological traits. Here, we focus on Orthoptera as a model group to test hypotheses on the relationships between species' traits and persistence in urban environments, using the city of Rome, Italy, as study area. By compiling and comparing species checklists for two distinct time frames, we assessed assemblage variation across the last three decades and revealed that local extinction of Orthoptera in urban areas is trait‐biased. Species with low mobility and fertility, and narrower—more specialised—climatic niches showed higher probability of local extinction. Our results point at both climate and land use changes as potentially major drivers of orthopterans' local extinction in urban areas, suggesting that strategies to increase natural habitat preservation and connectivity, and mitigate climate‐change induced events, may both prove effective in sustaining richer insect communities within urban areas.

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