Urban insect bioarks of the 21st century.

Sarah E Diamond, Grace Bellino, Gideon G Deme
Author Information
  1. Sarah E Diamond: Department of Biology, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH 44106, USA. Electronic address: sed62@case.edu.
  2. Grace Bellino: Department of Biology, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH 44106, USA.
  3. Gideon G Deme: Department of Biology, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH 44106, USA.

Abstract

Insects exhibit divergent biodiversity responses to cities. Many urban populations are not at equilibrium: biodiversity decline or recovery from environmental perturbation is often still in progress. Substantial variation in urban biodiversity patterns suggests the need to understand its mechanistic basis. In addition, current urban infrastructure decisions might profoundly influence future biodiversity trends. Although many nature-based solutions to urban climate problems also support urban insect biodiversity, trade-offs are possible and should be avoided to maximize biodiversity-climate cobenefits. Because insects are coping with the dual threats of urbanization and climate change, there is an urgent need to design cities that facilitate persistence within the city footprint or facilitate compensatory responses to global climate change as species transit through the city footprint.

MeSH Term

Animals
Ecosystem
Cities
Urbanization
Biodiversity
Insecta

Word Cloud

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