2013
DOI: 10.1007/s11252-013-0316-1
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Species richness in urban parks and its drivers: A review of empirical evidence

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Cited by 440 publications
(267 citation statements)
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References 82 publications
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“…Identification of all vegetation (trees, palms, shrubs, groundcover, etc.) in urban parks is necessary to study the distribution of native and exotic, habitat diversity and flora-fauna relationships (Nielsen et al, 2013). The structure (diameter, height and tree canopy size) of big and matured vegetation was measured.…”
Section: Species Richnessmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Identification of all vegetation (trees, palms, shrubs, groundcover, etc.) in urban parks is necessary to study the distribution of native and exotic, habitat diversity and flora-fauna relationships (Nielsen et al, 2013). The structure (diameter, height and tree canopy size) of big and matured vegetation was measured.…”
Section: Species Richnessmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Small urban parks provide an essential, but sometimes overlooked component of urban green infrastructure (Peschardt et al, 2014). Most previous research that relates urban parks, biodiversity and ecosystem services were focused on large size parks (Idilfitri & Mohamad, 2012;Nielsen, van den Bosch, Maruthaveeran, & van den Bosch, 2013). Many of ecosystem services in urban areas depend on the species present in different green areas (e.g.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…En el caso de áreas verdes, la diversidad y la cobertura de la vegetación suelen estar positivamente correlacionadas con la riqueza y la diversidad de aves, por tanto, áreas amplias con una mayor variedad de tipo de vegetación arbórea y arbustiva, exhiben mayor riqueza de especies (Friesen et al, 1995;Estades, 1995;Nolazco, 2012). Los parques suelen ser las áreas verdes urbanas con mayor riqueza de especies, al observarse esto tanto para aves, plantas vasculares, mamíferos e insectos (Nielsen et al, 2014). Sin embargo, la riqueza de plantas vasculares y leñosas exóticas en los parques urbanos llegan incluso a representar más del 50 % en algunas urbanizaciones, mientras que las aves no alcanzan el 15 % (Nielsen et al, 2014).…”
Section: Introductionunclassified
“…Many abiotic processes such as temperature regime (Oke 1982;Huang et al 2011), light level (Longcore and Rich 2004), hydrologic cylce (Walsh et al 2005), nutrient flow (Pickett et al 2011), and decomposition cycles (Kostel-hughes et al 1998), are altered in some way. Urban parks can still function as biodiversity hotspots (Nielsen et al 2014), with a higher degree of complexity helping sustain higher biodiversity (Cornelis and Hermy 2004). The floral and faunal species inhabiting urban parks must also contend with introduced, exotic species (Mckinney 2002).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Remnant patches of habitat possess the ability to retain species that otherwise would not persist within the heavily altered urban environment (Nielsen et al 2014), but these areas are threatened by human encroachment, development, and management practices (Pickett et al 2011). There does exist a mechanism to maintain their potential as biodiversity reserves within urban areas, in the form of urban parks (Nielsen et al 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%