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      Biodiverse cities: the nursery industry, homeowners, and neighborhood differences drive urban tree composition

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          Socioeconomics drive urban plant diversity.

          Spatial variation in plant diversity has been attributed to heterogeneity in resource availability for many ecosystems. However, urbanization has resulted in entire landscapes that are now occupied by plant communities wholly created by humans, in which diversity may reflect social, economic, and cultural influences in addition to those recognized by traditional ecological theory. Here we use data from a probability-based survey to explore the variation in plant diversity across a large metropolitan area using spatial statistical analyses that incorporate biotic, abiotic, and human variables. Our prediction for the city was that land use, along with distance from urban center, would replace the dominantly geomorphic controls on spatial variation in plant diversity in the surrounding undeveloped Sonoran desert. However, in addition to elevation and current and former land use, family income and housing age best explained the observed variation in plant diversity across the city. We conclude that a functional relationship, which we term the "luxury effect," may link human resource abundance (wealth) and plant diversity in urban ecosystems. This connection may be influenced by education, institutional control, and culture, and merits further study.
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            Characterization of Households and its Implications for the Vegetation of Urban Ecosystems

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              Residential landscapes as social-ecological systems: a synthesis of multi-scalar interactions between people and their home environment

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Ecological Monographs
                Ecol Monogr
                Wiley-Blackwell
                00129615
                February 08 2018
                :
                :
                Article
                10.1002/ecm.1290
                8a7e22ec-e631-49c1-b7bc-0fbbe3e60695
                © 2018

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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