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Data from: Rarity begets rarity: Social and environmental drivers of rare organisms in cities

dataset
posted on 2025-08-22, 17:32 authored by Theresa W. Ong, Brenda B. Lin, Azucena Lucatero, Hamutahl Cohen, Peter Bichier, Monika H. Egerer, Alana Danieu, Shalene Jha, Stacy PhilpottStacy Philpott, Heidi Liere
<p dir="ltr">Cities are sometimes characterized as homogenous with species assemblages composed of abundant, generalist species having similar ecological functions. Under this assumption, rare species, or species observed infrequently, would have especially high conservation value in cities for their potential to increase functional diversity. Management to increase the number of rare species in cities could be an important conservation strategy in a rapidly urbanizing world.</p><p dir="ltr">However, most studies of species rarity define rarity in relatively pristine environments where human management and disturbance is minimized. We know little about what species are rare, how many species are rare, and what management practices promote rare species in urban environments. Here, we identified which plants and species of birds and bees that control pests and pollinate crops are rare in urban gardens and assessed how social, biophysical factors, and cross-taxonomic comparisons influence rare species richness. We found overwhelming numbers of rare species, with more than 50% of plants observed classified as rare. Our results highlight the importance of women, older individuals, and gardeners who live closer to garden sites in increasing the number of rare plants within urban areas. Fewer rare plants were found in older gardens and gardens with more bare soil. There were more rare bird species in larger gardens and more rare bee species for which canopy cover was higher. We also found that in some cases, rarity begets rarity, with positive correlations found between the number of rare plants and bee species and between bee and bird species. Overall, our results suggest that urban gardens include a high number of species existing at low frequency and that social and biophysical factors promoting rare, planned biodiversity can cascade down to promote rare, associated biodiversity.</p>

Funding

Biodiversity, Sustainability, And Ecosystem Services In Urban Agricultural Landscapes

National Institute of Food and Agriculture

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

National Institute of Food and Agriculture

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

National Institute of Food and Agriculture

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History

Data contact name

Philpott, Stacy, M.

Data contact email

sphilpot@ucsc.edu

Publisher

Dryad

Temporal Extent Start Date

2015-05-01

Temporal Extent End Date

2017-11-15

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
  • society

National Agricultural Library Thesaurus terms

cities; ecological function; rare species; functional diversity; humans; urban areas; birds; bees; pest control; crops; gardens; species richness; women; gardeners; gardening; soil; canopy; California

OMB Bureau Code

  • 005:20 - National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Pending citation

  • No

Public Access Level

  • Public

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