Abstract

The species-area relationship (SAR) is one of the most investigated patterns in ecology and conservation biology, yet there is no study testing how different levels of urbanization influence its shape. Here we tested the impact of urbanization on avian SARs along a rural-urban gradient using the breeding birds of Rome (Central Italy). We divided the city into 360 cells of 1 km2. Each cell was classified as rural, suburban or urban using the proportion of impervious surface calculated from remote sensing data. For each of these three landscape categories, we constructed a SAR as a species accumulation curve (Gleason function) using bird species distribution data. SAR intercepts (i.e. the number of species per unit area) decreased from rural to urban areas, which indicates that urbanization depressed the number of species, reflecting the loss of specialized species strictly associated with natural habitats. The slope was highest for the rural curve, indicating that natural landscapes have the highest turnover due to their higher habitat heterogeneity. A higher slope for the urban cells, compared to the suburban ones, can be explained by the presence of green spaces embedded in the built-up matrix which host different avian communities. Previous studies that compared whole cities with natural areas failed to find differences in the respective SARs. Our study, which constructed SARs for different levels of urbanization, indicated significant changes in the SARs along the rural-urban gradient. Further analyses in other cities and taxa will be useful to test how general are our findings.

Highlights

  • IntroductionUrban expansion is considered one of the major threats to biodiversity (Czech et al 2000; McKinney 2002, 2006; McDonald et al 2013), yet the complexity of the urbanization process led most cities to present a mosaic of habitats that supports the presence of many rich biotic communities (Adler and Tanner 2013; Fattorini 2019)

  • Urban expansion is considered one of the major threats to biodiversity (Czech et al 2000; McKinney 2002, 2006; McDonald et al 2013), yet the complexity of the urbanization process led most cities to present a mosaic of habitats that supports the presence of many rich biotic communities (Adler and Tanner 2013; Fattorini 2019).This mosaic of habitats can be ideally summarized by an environmental gradient, ranging from relatively natural areas, typically at the border of the city, to highly modified urban landscapes in its more interior sectors

  • Our study indicated that the avian species-area relationships (SARs) obtained as species-accumulation curves (SACs) were

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Summary

Introduction

Urban expansion is considered one of the major threats to biodiversity (Czech et al 2000; McKinney 2002, 2006; McDonald et al 2013), yet the complexity of the urbanization process led most cities to present a mosaic of habitats that supports the presence of many rich biotic communities (Adler and Tanner 2013; Fattorini 2019) This mosaic of habitats can be ideally summarized by an environmental gradient, ranging from relatively natural areas, typically at the border of the city, to highly modified urban landscapes in its more interior sectors.

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