Publication details

Biotic homogenization or riparian refugia? Urban and wild land snail assemblages along a subtropical precipitation gradient

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Authors

PEREZ K.E. NAJEV B.S.L. CHRISTOFFERSEN B. NEKOLA Jeffrey Clark

Year of publication 2021
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Journal of Urban Ecology
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

Citation
Web https://doi.org/10.1093/jue/juab002
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jue/juab002
Keywords residential yards; terrestrial snails; urban refuge; ß-diversity
Description A noted impact of urbanization is the tendency for biotic homogenization, or the increase of similarity of geographically disparate communities. On the other hand, some urban habitats harbor biodiversity native to their region, a role potentially important in xeric landscapes, with irrigation increasing the coverage and availability of mesic habitats in an otherwise water-limited landscape. We assessed the relative importance of urban yards as agents of biotic homogenization or riparian refugia by characterizing community composition of Tamaulipan thornforest land snail assemblages across a pronounced precipitation gradient in far south Texas, USA. We quantified ?- and ß-diversity and assessed whether the land snail fauna of urban yards are more similar to each other across a precipitation gradient than they are to their wild counterparts, as well as determined the significance of moisture in driving Tamaulipan thornforest ß-diversity, both in terms of turnover (changing species composition) and nestedness (species loss). Sites with both the wild and wet conditions had the highest values of species richness and abundance. Urban land snail communities were significantly homogenized, outweighing the influence of the precipitation gradient. We did not find urban yards served as a refuge for native, moisture-dependent, riparian snails. Our analyses find that turnover, not nestedness, is the largest contributor to ß-diversity in these assemblages. Studies of urbanization should address regional spatial scales to quantify how urbanization modifies regional biodiversity arising from background environmental gradients. Such an approach could lead to improved understanding of how large metroplex areas could be used to maintain and even promote biodiversity.
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