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Research article2019Peer reviewed

Importance of scale, land-use, and stream network properties for riparian plant communities along an urban gradient

Kuglerova, Lenka; Kielstra, Brian W.; Moore, R. Dan; Richardson, John S.

Abstract

Riparian forests along urban streams are affected by flashy hydrological regimes and adjacent upland land-use, and their downstream dynamics are altered by forest fragmentation and by frequent river network truncation. This can lead to lower riparian habitat quality, decreased dispersal along the river network and increased recruitment of novel plant communities including non-native species. Compared to forested landscapes, our understanding of riparian plant community diversity and composition along urban river networks is poor. We investigated riparian plant communities and riparian habitat variables along seven river networks situated along an urban gradient in the Greater Toronto Area, Canada. Six land-use metrics classifying the intensity of urbanisation on three spatial scales (sub-catchment, upstream riparian buffer, site buffer) were tested to explain the variation in riparian plant communities along the river networks and to describe the differences in riparian habitat. Riparian plant diversity peaked at sites which had between 40% and 70% of built-up land cover within sub-catchments; however, these communities contained a large number of non-native species compared to the forested streams. While total species richness and native species richness were more related to river network factors (catchment area), non-native richness was also affected by land-use within a site. Community composition was more related to local land-use than catchment area. Geographical distance between sites (both overland and hydrological) was increasingly more important for community heterogeneity along the urbanisation gradient. Riparian habitat worsened along the urbanisation gradient, with higher disturbance and soil pH and lower soil organic content and bryophyte cover in the more urban catchments. Riparian habitat variables were also related to the position along the river networks. Our results provide important insights into how riparian plant communities and riparian habitat differ along a gradient of urbanisation. Compared to previous studies we investigated the patterns in riparian vegetation in the context of river networks, including a variety of land-use metrics, and analysed data across different spatial scales. This revealed important trends in plant diversity, demonstrated that urban land-use increases the occurrence of non-native species, and showed that the land-use at the local scale is a stronger determinant of plant assemblages compared to land-use at broader scales. These novel findings can be applied to land management in order to mitigate the effects of urbanisation on riparian ecosystems and the functions they provide for adjacent streams and rivers.

Keywords

land-use/land cover; non-native species; riparian vegetation; river network; urban stream syndrome

Published in

Freshwater Biology
2019, Volume: 64, number: 3, pages: 587-600
Publisher: WILEY

    Sustainable Development Goals

    Make cities and human settlements inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable

    UKÄ Subject classification

    Ecology

    Publication identifier

    DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/fwb.13244

    Permanent link to this page (URI)

    https://res.slu.se/id/publ/98691