Title of article :
Butterfly diversity and human land use: Species assemblages along an urban grandient Original Research Article
Author/Authors :
Robert B. Blair، نويسنده , , Alan E. Launer، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1997
Pages :
13
From page :
113
To page :
125
Abstract :
We examined the distribution and abundance of butterfly species across an urban gradient and concomitant changes in community structure by censusing the butterfly and skipper populations at 48 points within six sites near Palo Alto, California, USA (all former oak woodlands). These sites represent a gradient of urban land use running from relatively undisturbed to highly developed and include a nature preserve, recreational area, golf course, residential neighborhood, office park and business district. The species richness and Shannon diversity of butterflies peaked at moderately disturbed sites while the relative abundance decreased from the natural to the urban areas. Butterfly species thought to be most representative of the original, predevelopment butterfly fauna progressively disappear as the sites become more urban. These patterns are significantly related to shifts in habitat structure that occur along the gradient as determined by canonical correspondence analysis (CCA) using the environmental variables of percent land covered by pavement, buildings, lawn, grasslands, and trees or shrubs. The mechanisms behind these patterns may be related to life history and resource use by the individual butterfly species.
Keywords :
oak woodland , species diversity , butterflies , Urbanization , land use , conservation , Gradient analysis
Journal title :
Biological Conservation
Serial Year :
1997
Journal title :
Biological Conservation
Record number :
835442
Link To Document :
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