Historical redlining impacts wildlife biodiversity across California

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Authors

Cesar Omar Estien, Mason Fidino, Christine E. Wilkinson, Rachel Morello-Frosch, Christopher J. Schell

Abstract

Legacy effects describe the persistent, long-term impacts on an ecosystem following the removal of an abiotic or biotic feature. Redlining, a policy that codified racial segregation and disinvestment in minoritized neighborhoods, has produced legacy effects with profound impacts on urban ecosystem structure and health. These legacies have detrimentally impacted public health outcomes, socioeconomic stability, and environmental health. However, the collateral impacts of redlining on nonhuman species are uncertain. Here, we investigated whether faunal biodiversity was associated with redlining. We used home-owner loan corporation (HOLC) maps [grades A (i.e., “best” and “greenlined”), B, C, and D (i.e., “hazardous” and “redlined”)] across four cities in California and participatory science data (iNaturalist) to estimate alpha and beta diversity across six clades (mammals, birds, insects, arachnids, reptiles, and amphibians) as a function of HOLC grade. We found that greenlined neighborhoods were able to detect unique species with less sampling effort, with redlined neighborhoods needing over 8,000 observations to detect the same number of unique species. Historically redlined neighborhoods had lower native and nonnative species richness compared to greenlined neighborhoods across each city, with disparities remaining at the clade level. Further, community composition (i.e., beta diversity) consistently differed among HOLC grades for all cities, including large differences in species assemblage observed between green and redlined neighborhoods. Our work spotlights the lasting effects of social injustices on the community ecology of cities, additionally emphasizing that urban conservation and management efforts must incorporate an anti-racist, justice-informed lens to improve biodiversity in urban environments.

DOI

https://doi.org/10.32942/X24K60

Subjects

Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Life Sciences

Keywords

Dates

Published: 2023-12-07 09:14

Last Updated: 2023-12-07 09:14

License

CC BY Attribution 4.0 International

Additional Metadata

Language:
English

Conflict of interest statement:
Authors declare no competing interests.

Data and Code Availability Statement:
Data and code used in this manuscript will be available upon acceptance of this manuscript.