Effects of Urban Horticulture on Insect Pollinator Community Structure: Sites
Identifier: 120_1Publication date: 2002
Author(s):
Nancy McIntyre;
Abstract:
Insects that pollinate flowering plants are often considered "keystone species," animals that play extremely important roles in ecosystem functioning such that their absence would have more widespread and far-reaching effects than their abundance alone would indicate. For example, the absence of pollinating insects would translate to a severe reduction in plant reproduction, which would in turn affect not only the plants but also seed-eating animals, herbivorous animals, predators of the herbivores, and so on in a trophic cascade. Such a scenario would impact not only wildlife but also human populations because insects pollinate the majority of human food-plants. While the importance of these relationships is acknowledged, surprisingly, little is known about how insect pollinator communities are affected by environmental changes, such as global climate change or urban development. There has recently been a call for research on insect pollinator communities, citing a pressing need to obtain baseline information in the face of probable future environmental changes.
The Sonoran Desert has one of the most diverse insect communities in the world (particularly for members of the Order Hymenoptera [bees, wasps, and ants], which perform the lion's share of pollination duties for both native and crop plants). This community may be threatened from the presence of the exotic honeybee and from habitat alteration in the form of urban development. We propose to conduct a pilot study to examine how the pollinator community differs under different forms of urban land use in the Phoenix metropolitan area.
We have three research questions: (1) How does the ratio of native species to the exotic honeybee differ among natural desert, urban desert remnants, and residential areas that also have flowering plants? (2) How does insect pollinator community structure (richness and abundance) differ among natural desert, urban desert remnants, and residential areas? and (3) How does insect pollinator community structure differ with different residential horticultural practices (xeriscaping with native plants vs. watered lawns with exotic species)?
Keywords:
urban, plants, insects, species, humans, deserts, animals, communities, community structure, flowers
caplter, central arizona phoenix longterm ecological research, arizona, caplter created, az, cap, arid land
Temporal Coverage:
1999-04-11Geographic Coverage:
Geographic Description:The Phoenix Metropolitan area is located at the Northern edge of the Sonoran Desert, Arizona, USABounding Coordinates:
Longitude:-112.388299 to -111.494458
Latitude:33.657253 to 33.323395
Contact:
Information Manager, Arizona State University,Global Institute of Sustainability,POB 875402,TEMPE
caplter.data@asu.edu
Methods used in producing this dataset:
Site locations were created by geocoding addresses in ArcGIS and according to description of the volunteers setting and collecting the traps. Therefore the spatial accuracy is not very good. These sites have not been taken by GPS.
Entities:
Spatial Vector:
po26_sites[download]
Description:
Horizontal Coordinate System:WGS_1984_UTM_Zone_12NGeometry Type: Point
Attribute:FID
Description:Internal feature number.
Attribute:Shape
Description:Feature geometry.
Attribute:CITY
Description:CITY
Attribute:Status
Description:Status
Attribute:Score
Description:Score
Measurement Unit:dimensionless
Attribute:Side
Description:Side of the street
Attribute:X
Description:longitude
Measurement Unit:degree
Attribute:Y
Description:latitude
Measurement Unit:degree
Attribute:Stan_addr
Description:Standard address
Attribute:Ref_ID
Description:Reference ID
Attribute:Pct_along
Description:Pct_along
Measurement Unit:dimensionless
Attribute:ARC_Street
Description:Street Address
Attribute:ARC_Zone
Description:Zip Code ID used
Attribute:SITE
Description:SITE ID
Attribute:ADDRESS
Description:ADDRESS
Attribute:ZIP
Description:ZIP CODE