Abstract

There are increasing calls to provide greenspace in urban areas, yet the ecological quality, as well as quantity, of greenspace is important. Short mown grassland designed for recreational use is the dominant form of urban greenspace in temperate regions but requires considerable maintenance and typically provides limited habitat value for most taxa. Alternatives are increasingly proposed, but the biodiversity potential of these is not well understood. In a replicated experiment across six public urban greenspaces, we used nine different perennial meadow plantings to quantify the relative roles of floristic diversity and height of sown meadows on the richness and composition of three taxonomic groups: plants, invertebrates, and soil microbes. We found that all meadow treatments were colonized by plant species not sown in the plots, suggesting that establishing sown meadows does not preclude further locally determined grassland development if management is appropriate. Colonizing species were rarer in taller and more diverse plots, indicating competition may limit invasion rates. Urban meadow treatments contained invertebrate and microbial communities that differed from mown grassland. Invertebrate taxa responded to changes in both height and richness of meadow vegetation, but most orders were more abundant where vegetation height was longer than mown grassland. Order richness also increased in longer vegetation and Coleoptera family richness increased with plant diversity in summer. Microbial community composition seems sensitive to plant species composition at the soil surface (0–10 cm), but in deeper soils (11–20 cm) community variation was most responsive to plant height, with bacteria and fungi responding differently. In addition to improving local residents’ site satisfaction, native perennial meadow plantings can produce biologically diverse grasslands that support richer and more abundant invertebrate communities, and restructured plant, invertebrate, and soil microbial communities compared with short mown grassland. Our results suggest that diversification of urban greenspace by planting urban meadows in place of some mown amenity grassland is likely to generate substantial biodiversity benefits, with a mosaic of meadow types likely to maximize such benefits.

Highlights

  • Urban greenspace has the potential to support considerable biodiversity (Aronson et al 2014, Beninde et al 2015) with potential benefits for human well-beingArticle e01946; page 1096BRIONY A

  • We replaced mown amenity grassland with a range of meadow-type vegetation in six public greenspaces to assess the response of biological diversity to urban meadow habitat creation

  • Increasing plant diversity and forb to grass ratio was associated with lower cover of non-sown plants, greater beetle richness in summer, greater abundance of some invertebrate orders and changed the composition of the soil fungal community at 0–10 cm depth

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Summary

Introduction

Urban greenspace has the potential to support considerable biodiversity (Aronson et al 2014, Beninde et al 2015) with potential benefits for human well-beingArticle e01946; page 1096BRIONY A. Common is the maintenance of greenspace as short mown grass in the form of lawns or amenity grassland (Mu€ller et al 2013). Amenity grassland is frequently mown, short sward vegetation that is managed for human recreational use, examples include lawns in public parks and sports grounds. Short-mown grassland habitats dominate temperate cities, in both public and private urban greenspaces, for example they cover 22.5% of the land area of Swedish cities, almost double the cover 50 yr ago (Hedblom et al 2017), and similar amounts in the UK (25%; Evans et al 2009) and United States (23%; Robbins and Birkenholtz 2003), which equates to 1.9% of the total land area of the continental United States (Milesi et al 2005)

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