Abstract

Urban green spaces are important for urban insects, providing both habitat space as well as stopover locations within the urban landscape. Street tree pits in cities are small, heterogeneous, and understudied green spaces that may be important for supporting urban insect communities. The purpose of this study was to investigate the composition of insect communities within tree pits in New York City, New York, USA (NYC) and compare tree pit insect communities across NYC neighborhoods. Tree pits in NYC are part of the New York City Parks system but are primarily managed by residents of each street. We postulated that insect assemblages within tree pits would contain both permanent (habitat) and transient (stopover) members and those communities would vary among neighborhoods. Insects were collected from understory plants in tree pits in four NYC neighborhoods during the summer of 2019. We found that the tree pits provided habitat for nine orders and 51 families of insects, the majority of which were herbivores and their associated predators or parasitoids, which were likely utilizing the tree pits as habitat space. Few clearly transient species (e.g. pollinators) were collected. Furthermore, insect communities were similar both within neighborhoods and among neighborhoods, suggesting that while tree pits management is not strictly regulated in NYC, tree pits in all neighborhoods provided habitat to sustain similar insect assemblages. At the neighborhood level, urban tree pits can harbor a diverse insect community and that capability is similar throughout the urban landscape.

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