Horizontal and vertical island biogeography of arthropods on green roofs: a review

From an ecological perspective, urban green roofs can be viewed as green islands embedded in an urban matrix. Island biogeography theory suggests that species richness on an island is the outcome of dynamic equilibrium between immigration and extinction. Immigration is affected by the size of an isl...

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Veröffentlicht in:Urban ecosystems 2017-08, Vol.20 (4), p.911-917
Hauptverfasser: Blank, Lior, Vasl, Amiel, Schindler, Bracha Y., Kadas, Gyongyver J., Blaustein, Leon
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container_end_page 917
container_issue 4
container_start_page 911
container_title Urban ecosystems
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creator Blank, Lior
Vasl, Amiel
Schindler, Bracha Y.
Kadas, Gyongyver J.
Blaustein, Leon
description From an ecological perspective, urban green roofs can be viewed as green islands embedded in an urban matrix. Island biogeography theory suggests that species richness on an island is the outcome of dynamic equilibrium between immigration and extinction. Immigration is affected by the size of an island and distance of an island from a colonizing source. In the context of green roofs, building height and horizontal distance from green areas can potentially be a limiting factor for many species. Here, we considered two distance components of green roofs - vertical (building height) and horizontal (distance of building from open green areas). Based on island biogeography theory, we would expect species richness or community similarity to be negatively related to horizontal or vertical distances from colonizing sources. The green roof literature addressing such questions is currently sparse. In our review comprised of 10 studies, we were unable to identify consistent statistically significant richness-distance or community similarity-distance (vertical or horizontal) relationships. The absence of statistically significant relationships could be due in large part to low statistical power as a consequence of both the paucity of roofs and limited range of vertical distances in many of the existing studies. In addition, these roofs differ in numerous aspects (e.g. roof size, age, substrate type, plant composition and building height). The low number of replicates, combined with the lack of homogeneity among replicates combines to reduce statistical power and our ability to detect differences.
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subjects Arthropods
Biogeography
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Ecology
Environmental Management
Extinction
Green buildings
Green roofs
Immigration
Island biogeography
Life Sciences
Nature Conservation
Roofing
Roofs
Similarity
Species extinction
Species richness
Statistical analysis
Statistical power
Statistical significance
Statistics
Urban Ecology
title Horizontal and vertical island biogeography of arthropods on green roofs: a review
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