Professor The Ohio State University Columbus, Ohio
Urban green spaces provide important wildlife habitat and ecosystem services. In legacy cities, built structures are demolished as populations dwindle, resulting in vacant land. Vacant land constitutes an opportunity to establish green infrastructure that provides ecosystem services. Our objective was to determine whether establishing green infrastructure on vacant land to manage stormwater could provide insect habitat in the legacy city of Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.A. Two green infrastructure treatments were implemented on vacant land in the Slavic Village neighborhood in 2014 and 2015: rain gardens and bioswales. We hypothesized that rain gardens and bioswales would support more abundant, species rich insect communities compared to unaltered vacant lots. Wild bees (Hymenoptera: Aculeata) and lady beetles (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae), insect groups of conservation concern, were sampled during the summer (June–August) from 2014 to 2016 using pan traps and yellow sticky card traps. Local vegetation and temporal variables were measured. Generalized linear mixed effects models evaluated whether insect biodiversity varied with treatment, habitat variables, site, and time. We collected 3,004 bees from pan traps and 5,438 lady beetles from yellow sticky card traps. Bee biodiversity was similar among treatments. In 2014, alien Coccinellidae abundance was higher in vacant lots compared to rain gardens. In 2015 and 2016, alien Coccinellidae were marginally more abundant in rain gardens compared to vacant lots and bioswales, while native Coccinellidae abundance was significantly higher in vacant lots. In the short term, establishing green infrastructure on vacant land can improve stormwater management without compromising vacant land as insect habitat.