Abstract

Urban gardens are important for human well-being, biodiversity and other ecosystem functions. Biodiversity-promoting initiatives would benefit from their owners being aware of the state of biodiversity in their gardens. We examined whether garden owners’ perceptions match actual biodiversity in their gardens and whether perceptions are influenced by the owners’ ecological knowledge. We used a structured interview to assess the motivations and biodiversity knowledge of owners of 33 domestic gardens in the city of Basel (Switzerland) and related them to a survey of native plants and several groups of ground-dwelling invertebrates in their gardens. Owners showed different priorities, with promotion of habitat for biodiversity, receiving, on average, higher scores than cultivation, recreation and garden designing. Owners prioritizing biodiversity promotion had gardens with high habitat richness. The garden owners’ perceptions of both native plant and overall invertebrate diversity were not correlated with actual diversity data for native plants and ground-dwelling invertebrates. The perceptions of the abundance of invertebrate groups by garden owners with good biodiversity knowledge were not more accurate than those from owners with less knowledge. Despite their willingness, many owners do not know all the opportunities to promote biodiversity. Initiatives to further biodiversity-friendly gardening should thus transfer knowledge.

Highlights

  • Increasing urbanization is an important driver of environmental change and alters the functioning of ecosystem processes [1,2]

  • The aim of our study was to examine whether the biodiversity perception of garden owners, obtained through structured interviews, match actual diversity of ground-dwelling invertebrates and native plant species in their gardens recorded in extensive surveys by experts

  • Our study showed that garden owners’ perceptions of the diversity of their gardens give limited information on the actual diversity of native plants and ground-dwelling invertebrates within those gardens

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Summary

Introduction

Increasing urbanization is an important driver of environmental change and alters the functioning of ecosystem processes [1,2]. Estimates of this proportion varied within the UK from 35% for Edinburgh to 47% in Leicester [15], and reached 36% in Paris [16], while private patios made up to 86% of green area in León, Nicaragua [17]. This translates into considerable land cover even on a country scale. In Switzerland, private gardens cover more than 1% of total land area (see [18])

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