Ag Data Commons
Browse

Data from: Promoting beneficial arthropods in urban agroecosystems: focus on flowers, maybe not native plants

dataset
posted on 2025-08-22, 16:59 authored by Stacy PhilpottStacy Philpott, Azucena Lucatero, Sofie Andrade, Cameron Hernandez, Peter Bichier
<p dir="ltr">(1) Urbanization threatens biodiversity, yet urban native plants support native biodiversity, contributing to conservation and ecosystem services. Within urban agroecosystems, where non-native plants are abundant, native plants may boost the abundance and richness of beneficial arthropods. Nevertheless, current information focuses on pollinators, with little attention being paid to other beneficials, like natural enemies. (2) We examined how the species richness of native plants, garden management, and landscape composition influence the abundance and species richness of all, native, and non-native bees, ladybeetles, ants, and ground-foraging spiders in urban agroecosystems (i.e., urban community gardens) in California. (3) We found that native plants (~10% of species, but only ~2.5% of plant cover) had little influence on arthropods, with negative effects only on nonnative spider richness, likely due to the low plant cover provided by native plants. Garden size boosted native and non-native bee abundance and richness and non-native spider richness; floral abundance boosted non-native spider abundance and native and non-native spider richness; and mulch cover and tree and shrub abundance boosted non-native spider richness. Natural habitat cover promoted non-native bee and native ant abundance, but fewer native ladybeetle species were observed. (4) While native plant richness may not strongly influence the abundance and richness of beneficial arthropods, other garden management features could be manipulated to promote the conservation of native organisms or ecosystem services provided by native and non-native organisms within urban agroecosystems.</p>

Funding

Biodiversity, Sustainability, And Ecosystem Services In Urban Agricultural Landscapes

National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Find out more...

Ecological Networks, Management Shifts, and Ecosystem Services In Urban Agricultural Landscapes

National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Find out more...

SUPERDAR - Supporting Undergraduates by Promoting Education, Research, Diversity, and Agricultural Resilience

National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Find out more...

Fostering Agroecology and Multicultural Scholarship

National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Find out more...

History

Data contact name

Philpott, Stacy, M.

Data contact email

sphilpot@ucsc.edu

Publisher

Dryad

Intended use

We took a multi-taxa approach to examine how the presence and abundance of native plants may support one group of pollinators (bees) and three groups of natural enemies (ladybeetles, ants, and ground-foraging spiders) within urban agroecosystems. We also consider the native status of arthropods to see if all, native, or non-native arthropods respond to native plants in different ways. We focused our study on urban agroecosystems, a habitat frequently highlighted as important in supporting biodiversity in urban areas

Temporal Extent Start Date

2013-05-01

Temporal Extent End Date

2015-10-06

Theme

  • Not specified

Geographic location - description

Santa Clara County, California, USA Santa Cruz County, California, USA Monterey County, California, USA

ISO Topic Category

  • biota
  • environment

National Agricultural Library Thesaurus terms

beneficial arthropods; agroecosystems; flowers; indigenous species; urbanization; ecosystem services; introduced plants; pollinators; natural enemies; species richness; landscapes; bees; Coccinellidae; Formicidae; Araneae; urban population; community gardens; California; mulches; trees; shrubs; habitats; biodiversity

OMB Bureau Code

  • 005:20 - National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Pending citation

  • No

Public Access Level

  • Public

Usage metrics

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC