Horticultural availability and homeowner preferences drive plant diversity and composition in urban yards

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Statistics
View Statistics

Collection period

2008-07-15
2012-08-30

Date completed

2018-11-20

Date updated

Time period coverage

Geographic coverage

Source information

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Title

Horticultural availability and homeowner preferences drive plant diversity and composition in urban yards

Published Date

2019-12-30

Author Contact

Cavender-Bares, Jeannine
cavender@umn.edu

Type

Dataset
Field Study Data
Survey Data-Quantitative

Abstract

Understanding the factors that influence biodiversity in urban areas is important for informing management efforts aimed at enhancing the ecosystem services in urban settings and curbing the spread of invasive introduced species. We determined the ecological and socioeconomic factors that influence patterns of plant richness, phylogenetic diversity and composition in 133 private household yards in the Minneapolis-Saint Paul Metropolitan area, Minnesota, USA. We compared the composition of spontaneously occurring plant species and those planted by homeowners with composition in natural areas (at the Cedar Creek Ecosystem Science Reserve) and in the horticulture pool of species available from commercial growers. Yard area and fertilizer frequency influenced species richness of the spontaneous species but expressed homeowner values did not. In contrast, the criteria that homeowners articulated as important in their management decisions—including aesthetics, wildlife, neatness and food provision—significantly predicted cultivated species richness. Strikingly, the composition of plant species that people cultivated in their yards resembled the taxonomic and phylogenetic composition of species available commercially. In contrast, the taxonomic and phylogenetic composition of spontaneous species showed high similarity to natural areas. The large fraction of introduced species that homeowners planted was a likely consequence of what was available for them to purchase. The study links the composition and diversity of yard flora to their natural and anthropogenic sources and sheds light on the human factors and values that influence the plant diversity in residential areas of a major urban system. Enhanced understanding of the influences of the sources of plants—both native and introduced—that enter urban systems and the human factors and values that influence their diversity is critical to identifying the levers to manage urban biodiversity and ecosystem services.

Description

The files provide the plant species composition in 133 household yards in the Twin Cities including plants that are intentionally cultivated in yards and those that occur spontaneously. The native (N) and introduced (I) status of each species is given. Plant diversity metrics, calculated using a pruned phylogeny, are given for each yard, combined with survey responses of homeowners and other socioeconomic data.

Referenced by

Cavender-Bares, J., J. P. Cubino, W. D. Pearse, S. E. Hobbie, A. J. Lange, S. Knapp, and K. C. Nelson. 2020. Horticultural availability and homeowner preferences drive plant diversity and composition in urban yards. Ecological Applications.
https://doi.org/10.1002/eap.2082
Knapp, S., L. Dinsmore, C. Fissore, S. E. Hobbie, I. Jakobsdottir, J. Kattge, J. Y. King, S. Klotz, J. P. McFadden, and J. Cavender-Bares. 2012. Phylogenetic and functional characteristics of household yard floras and their changes along an urbanization gradient. Ecology 93:S83-S98.
https://doi.org/10.1890/11-0392.1

Related to

Replaces

item.page.isreplacedby

Publisher

Funding information

National Science Foundation EF-1638519
National Science Foundation DEB-1234162
NIFA McIntire-Stennis 1000343 MIN-42-051

item.page.sponsorshipfunderid

item.page.sponsorshipfundingagency

item.page.sponsorshipgrant

Previously Published Citation

Other identifiers

Suggested citation

Cavender-Bares, Jeannine; Padullés Cubino, Josep; Pearse, William D.; Hobbie, Sarah E.; Lange, A.J.; Knapp, Sonja; Nelson, Kristen C.. (2019). Horticultural availability and homeowner preferences drive plant diversity and composition in urban yards. Retrieved from the Data Repository for the University of Minnesota (DRUM), https://doi.org/10.13020/89ae-2877.

Content distributed via the University Digital Conservancy may be subject to additional license and use restrictions applied by the depositor. By using these files, users agree to the Terms of Use. Materials in the UDC may contain content that is disturbing and/or harmful. For more information, please see our statement on harmful content in digital repositories.