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Featured researches published by Stuart Connop.


Insect Conservation and Diversity | 2011

Microsatellite analysis reveals the spatial dynamics of Bombus humilis and Bombus sylvarum

Stuart Connop; Thomas C. J. Hill; Jonathan Steer; Phil Shaw

Abstract.  1. Substantial reductions in the distributional ranges of several species of bumblebee have been recorded in the UK. Loss and fragmentation of suitable foraging and nesting habitat to agricultural intensification is thought to be the main driving force behind declines.


Israel Journal of Ecology & Evolution | 2015

Initial insights on the biodiversity potential of biosolar roofs: a London Olympic Park green roof case study

Caroline Nash; Jack Clough; D Gedge; Richard Lindsay; Darryl J. Newport; Mihaela Anca Ciupala; Stuart Connop

Cities dominated by impervious artificial surfaces can experience a multitude of negative environmental impacts. Restoration of green infrastructure has been identified as a mechanism for increasing urban resilience, enabling cities to transition towards sustainable futures in the face of climate-driven change. Building rooftops represent a viable space for integrating new green infrastructure into high-density urban areas. Urban rooftops also provide prime locations for photovoltaic (PV) systems. There is an increasing recognition that these two technologies can be combined to deliver reciprocal benefits in terms of energy efficiency and biodiversity targets. Scarcity of scientific evaluation of the interaction between PVs and green roofs means that the potential benefits are currently poorly understood. This study documents evidence from a biodiversity monitoring study of a substantial biosolar roof installed in the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park. Vegetation and invertebrate communities were sampled and h...


Urban Ecosystems | 2015

Are microbial communities in green roof substrates comparable to those in post-industrial sites?—a preliminary study

Chloe J. Molineux; Alan C. Gange; Stuart Connop; Darryl J. Newport

Green roofs have been implemented on new buildings as a tool to mitigate the loss of post-industrial or brownfield land. For this to be successful, the roofs must be designed appropriately; that is with the right growing media, suitable substrate depth, similar vegetation and with a comparable soil microbial community for a healthy rhizosphere. This study compared soil microbial communities (determined using phospholipid fatty acid or PLFA analysis) of two extensive green roofs and two post-industrial sites in Greater London. It was found that green roof rootzones constructed using engineered growing media are not depauperate, but can have an abundant soil microbial community that in some cases may be more diverse and numerous than communities found in brownfield areas. In this preliminary study, one green roof supported abundant soil microbial communities that were dominated by gram negative and aerobic bacteria, whilst fungal abundance was similar across all sites analysed. Furthermore, ratios of fungal: bacterial PLFA’s were larger from post-industrial sites but overall were consistent with bacterial dominated soils typical of early successional habitats.


Archive | 2016

University of East London: the 2015 biodiversity update

Jack Clough; Stuart Connop

In May 2012 the Rio+20 summit confirmed a 30% global decline in wildlife since 1970. Following on from the United Nations (UN) International Year of Biodiversity in 2010, global declines in biodiversity have never had such high profile. Rio+20 has been billed as a chance for world leaders to put global society on a sustainable path and an opportunity for the world to get serious about the need for development to be sustainable (Black 2012). For development to be truly sustainable this must include conserving, on a landscape scale, the valuable ecosystem services that biodiversity provides (TEEB 2010). Not only does this mean protecting and enhancing natural and semi-natural landscapes, but also restoring green and blue infrastructure of high biodiversity value in urban areas. As such, rather than merely targeting conservation efforts across the broader countryside, biodiversity also must be returned to our cities, towns and suburbs by breaking up expanses of hard impermeable surfaces and creating niches within which nature can take a hold.


Cities | 2013

Transitioning to resilience and sustainability in urban communities

Marcus Collier; Zorica Nedovic-Budic; Jeroen Aerts; Stuart Connop; Dermot Foley; Karen Foley; Darryl J. Newport; Siobhán E. McQuaid; Aleksander Slaev; Peter H. Verburg


Environmental Science & Policy | 2016

Renaturing cities using a regionally-focused biodiversity-led multifunctional benefits approach to urban green infrastructure

Stuart Connop; Paula Vandergert; Bernd Eisenberg; Marcus Collier; Caroline Nash; Jack Clough; Darryl J. Newport


Science of The Total Environment | 2014

Manipulating soil microbial communities in extensive green roof substrates.

Chloe J. Molineux; Stuart Connop; Alan C. Gange


Scientific Reports | 2016

Predicting bee community responses to land-use changes : Effects of geographic and taxonomic biases

Adriana De Palma; Stefan Abrahamczyk; Marcelo A. Aizen; Matthias Albrecht; Yves Basset; Adam J. Bates; Robin J. Blake; Céline Boutin; Rob Bugter; Stuart Connop; Leopoldo Cruz-López; Saul A. Cunningham; Ben Darvill; Tim Diekötter; Silvia Dorn; Nicola Downing; Martin H. Entling; Nina Farwig; Antonio Felicioli; Steven J. Fonte; Robert Fowler; Markus Franzén; Dave Goulson; Ingo Grass; Mick E. Hanley; Stephen D. Hendrix; Farina Herrmann; Felix Herzog; Andrea Holzschuh; Birgit Jauker


Ecological Engineering | 2015

Using recycled aggregates in green roof substrates for plant diversity

Chloe J. Molineux; Alan C. Gange; Stuart Connop; Darryl J. Newport


Biological Conservation | 2010

The role of dietary breadth in national bumblebee (Bombus) declines: Simple correlation?

Stuart Connop; Thomas C. J. Hill; Jonathan Steer; Phil Shaw

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Caroline Nash

University of East London

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Jack Clough

University of East London

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Marcus Collier

University College Dublin

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Aoife Corcoran

University College Dublin

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Karen Foley

University College Dublin

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Philip Crowe

University College Dublin

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