4.5 Article

Are plant communities mainly determined by anthropogenic land cover along urban riparian corridors?

Journal

URBAN ECOSYSTEMS
Volume 19, Issue 4, Pages 1767-1786

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11252-016-0567-8

Keywords

Landscape; Soil properties; Spontaneous vegetation; Between-class co-inertia; Urban biodiversity

Funding

  1. CIFRE grant from the Association Nationale de la Recherche et de la Technologie (ANRT) [2013/0025]
  2. Eurometropole de Strasbourg (Environment and Urban Ecology department)

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Often used as a mitigation tool to landscape fragmentation, urban riparian corridors also suffered from the effects of the urban expansion. This study explored the relationships between plant riparian communities and two major environmental variables (land cover, soil characteristics) and analyzed the floristic change along an urbanization gradient. Fifteen sites were surveyed on both riverbanks of two riparian corridors characterized by contrasting water regimes in Strasbourg, North Eastern France. Data of spontaneous species abundance was collected from 180 quadrats using (i) all plant species, (ii) herbaceous stratum and (iii) ligneous stratum (bush and tree). The diversity and compositional patterns of riparian plant species were analyzed within each corridor according to three levels of urbanization (urban, suburban, peri-urban). Relationships between riparian communities, land cover and soil chemical properties (pH, nitrogen and carbon content, moisture) were established by between-class co-inertia analyses. Land cover emerged as the main factor explaining changes in riparian communities along the rural-urban gradient while soil chemical properties discriminate water stress and fluvial dynamics of the two corridors. Similar compositional patterns were found within the most urbanized sites with the establishment of ubiquitous species. The herbaceous stratum is best linked to the level of urbanization, whereas the tree stratum is primarily correlated with corridor attributes (hydrological regime, soil properties). Although riparian species and communities are mainly determined by land cover, urban riparian corridors maintain native biodiversity up to the urban center.

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