Spiders (Araneae) from green roofs in north-west Switzerland – faunistic data with two species new to Switzerland

Abstract. Extensive green roofs are recognised as being a suitable habitat for some specific plants and arthropods that are resistant to very extreme hot and dry conditions. Little is known about spider species visiting and living on green roofs. In 2018 and 2019, 29 green roofs in Basel and four roofs in Aarau (Switzerland) were sampled using pitfall traps during the entire growing season. In the sampling period, 18467 adult spiders were collected and identified into 123 species. Two species were collected for the first time in Switzerland: Erigone dentosa O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1894 and Runcinia grammica (C. L. Koch, 1837). According to the Red List of Germany (and especially Baden-Württemberg), 26 species are of special interest from a nature conservation perspective. On the other hand, four species are alien species (i.e. they originate from other continents), and 14 species are expanding their range northward. Green roofs may therefore harbour endangered species, but there is also the possibility that the newly invading species may become dominant. Only after many years or even decades will it be possible to judge whether green roofs are primarily substitutes for lost habitats or stepping-stones for new invaders. Zusammenfassung. Extensiv gepflegte, begrünte Dächer gelten als geeignete Habitate für einige Pflanzen und Gliedertiere, die an extrem heisse und trockene Bedingungen angepasst sind. Nur wenig ist bekannt über Spinnen, welche begrünte Dächer besiedeln. In den Jahren 2018 und 2019 wurden 29 begrünte Dächer in Basel und vier in Aarau während der gesamten Vegetationsperiode mit Hilfe von Bodenfallen besammelt. Dabei wurden 18467 adulte Spinnen aus 123 Arten gesammelt. Zwei Arten wurden erstmalig für die Schweiz nachgewiesen: Erigone dentosa O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1894 und Runcinia grammica (C. L. Koch, 1837). Gemäss den Roten Listen für Deutschland (und speziell von Baden-Württemberg) sind aus naturschutzfachlicher Sicht 26 Arten von besonderem Interesse. Andererseits stammen vier Arten ursprünglich aus anderen Kontinenten (alien species) und 14 Arten sind in Arealerweiterung aus dem Süden nach Norden begriffen. Begrünte Dächer können also bedrohten Arten einen Lebensraum bieten, aber gleichzeitig besteht auch die Gefahr, dass neu eindringende Arten dominant werden (invasive Arten). Erst nach langjähriger Beobachtung wird es möglich sein, zu beurteilen, ob begrünte Dächer vor allem Ersatzlebensräume für bedrohte Arten oder eher Trittsteine für potentiell invasive Arten darstellen.

Implementation of green roofs in urban planning and new flat roof buildings aims to reduce heat-island effects of the city and provide urban habitats for a specific flora and fauna and thus contribute to improving urban biodiversity (Oberndorfer et al. 2007). The main difference between green roofs and ground level sites is the thin substrate layer without a connection to deeper layers, which leads to extreme habitat conditions. In areas with prolonged dry periods in summer, the substrate can dry out from extensively to completely. On the other hand, in cooler seasons with reduced evaporation the roof habitats can often become waterlogged (Brenneisen 2009). Green roofs containing diversity of vegetation structure and variation of substrate thickness can provide greater species richness compared to standard green roofs (Brenneisen 2009, Gonsalves et al 2021 and may be a substitute for brownfield sites with respect to invertebrate abundance and diversity (Kadas 2006) (Fig. 1).
Furthermore, these studies showed that green roofs serve not only as stepping-stones, but also as possible permanent sites. For smaller animals, green roofs may even provide larger populations and can thus also be considered as "source" habitats in the sense of the metapopulation principle for the dispersal of species. In recent years, all over the world, numerous studies have examined the effects of flat roofs on vegetation and arthropod populations (McKinney et al. 2019, Dromgold et al. 2020, Kyrö et al. 2020, Sanchez Domingues et al. 2020. Most of these studies were based on short term sampling or only analysed effects on higher taxonomic levels. Nevertheless, in Switzerland a few studies recently analysed faunistic data for several arthropod groups, such as ground beetles (Pétremand et al. 2018a), wild bees (Braaker et al. 2014, Pétremand et al. 2018b, Passasseo et al. 2020 and hoverflies (Passasseo et al. 2021). These studies highlighted the role played by green roofs as resources and habitats for endangered and xerothermophilic species within urban areas.
Spiders (Araneae) on green roofs have been studied in several European countries: Austria (Komposch 2004, Milasowszky & Hepner 2017, Great Britain (Kadas 2006), France (Madre et al. 2013), Germany (Balkenhol et al. 1998, Kühn & Buchholz 2009, Ksiazek-Mikenas et al. 2018) and Switzerland (Brenneisen & Hänggi 2006). Quite often, quantitative data at higher taxonomic levels are analysed with high accuracy while the composition of the fauna at species level, the qualitative data, are neglected. Therefore, the spider fauna and its development on green roofs is currently poorly known. Brenneisen & Hänggi (2006) presented one of the earliest sets of faunistic data of spiders on green roofs for central Europe. Some of the same roofs (together with new ones) were re-sampled in 2013 and again later (Kyrö et al. 2018, Pétremand et al. 2018a. A complete ecological analysis of these datasets is being prepared for subsequent publication. In this paper, only faunistic data on spider species with two new species for the Swiss fauna and some further remarkable species for Switzerland are presented.

Material and methods Site characteristics
In the city of Basel 29 sites on 17 different buildings and, in addition, four sites on one building in Aarau were investigated. The panel of green roofs chosen aims to cover the diversity of green roof types found in the Basel agglomeration. Green roofs that have received the greatest interest recently are extensive green roofs. They are composed of lightweight layers of free-draining material that support low-growing, tough, drought-resistant vegetation. Generally, the depth of growing medium is from a few centimetres up to a maximum of around 15 cm. These roof types have great potential for wide application because, being lightweight, they require little or no additional structural support from the building. Moreover, the vegetation is adapted to the extreme roof top environment (wind exposure, high temperatures, drought) and therefore the roofs require little in the way of maintenance. The diversity of substrates on the green roofs investigated went from low substrate layers (8 cm) to 15 cm with some additional even deeper substrate structures up to 30 cm, and additional elements such as logs and larger stones.

Sampling design
Sampling was carried out with pitfall traps from the beginning of April to the end of October in 2018 and from the end of March to the end of October in 2019. Some, but not all sites were investigated in both years. Ten traps were set per site. Pitfall traps were plastic tubes (diameter 7 cm, 10 cm deep) with another small plastic cup (diameter 6 cm, 7 cm deep) inside, half filled with 10% acetic acid to conserve any organisms trapped. The traps were replaced every 14 days; during hot and dry periods every 7 days.
The material was manually sorted into the groups "ground beetles", "arachnids" and "others". Determination of the spiders mainly followed the internet key "Araneae -spiders of Europe" (Nentwig et al. 2022) and original literature was used where useful. Taxonomical literature is only listed for the species discussed in the text. Nomenclature follows the World Spider Catalog (WSC 2022). Photos were made using a KEYENCE 6000 with auto-stacking. A reference collection is stored in the Natural History Museum of Basel.

Results
The total capture included 123 species of spiders with 18467 adult individuals (Appendix 1). As is usual for pitfall captures, the number of males (12492) was clearly higher than that of the females (5975). Twenty-two families were registered. The family Linyphiidae with 33 species was the most diverse, followed by Lycosidae (17), Salticidae (14), Gnaphosidae (12), Thomisidae (11) and Theridiidae (10). The species with the highest numbers of specimens were: The configuration of the male palp as well as the structures of the female epigyne suggest that the species belongs to the psychrophila-group. The embolic division of the male palp resembles E. cristatopalpus Simon, 1884, while the dorsal edge of the tibia shows a notch as in E. tenuimana Simon, 1884 or E. aletris Crosby & Bishop, 1928 (Fig. 3b). The female epigyne (Fig. 4) mostly resembles that of E. cristatopalpus. A comprehensive discussion on the spread of this Nearctic spider species in Europe is given in Unruh (2020) and Kielhorn (2022) and a taxonomic discussion of the species can be found in Arco et al. (2019). The first discovery of the species in Europe dates back to the winter of 2012/2013 in a cemetery in Antwerp, Belgium (Kekenbosch & Baert 2013). The specimens from Oslo, Norway are presumed to have been imported with Thuja bushes (Oger 2022), and the ones from Germany are reported from a nursery (Unruh 2020). In Unruh (2020) it was questioned whether this species is able to establish itself outdoors. Our finding of it on two roofs would indicate that the species is able to colonise outdoor habitats. Determination. Levy (1973), Roberts (1998), Grismaldo & Achitte-Schmutzler (2020) In Europe, Runcinia grammica is mainly known from the Mediterranean region, but it is also known from Africa and Asia. In Central Europe this species seems to be restricted to very warm and dry habitats (Bauer & Höfer 2017). The species is already known in the region around Basel: Bauer & Höfer (2017) found it in Weil am Rhein (Germany) on a ruderal area near railway tracks. A second record of the species in the surroundings of Basel is known from the "Petite Camarque Alsacienne" in Saint-Louis, France (Theo Blick, yellow pan, 1 (, 13. Aug. 1992, unpublished). There are only very few records of this species north of the Alps (not yet known in Austria). The three records from Germany and the record from Alsace were all made after 1990. Whether this indicates a northward spreading or it just means that the (possibly rare) species had never been caught before, remains unclear.

Endangered species on green roofs?
For Switzerland, there is no Red List for spiders. Nevertheless, the geographic and climatic conditions in the region of Basel are more or less the same as in the Upper Rhine Plain which, on the eastern side, forms part of the German state of Baden-Württemberg. Therefore, in Tab. 1, we compared our species   (Nährig et al. 2003) and on a broader scale with that of Germany (Blick et al. 2016). Out of the 123 species caught on all the green roofs investigated, 26 are classified in some category of the red lists or are only recorded for the first time in Germany after the date of these lists. So more than a fifth of the species (21.1 %) are of special faunistic interest. To evaluate the true status of the species in the region, we compared our data with two published lists (Hänggi 1988, Brenneisen & Hänggi 2006) and five species lists of current comparable projects (all not yet published), some with several places (habitats) of investiga-tion in Basel or its surroundings. If a species is mentioned in five to seven species lists, we presume it to be "established" in the region. Two to four is judged "rare" and if the species is mentioned for the first time in the region, it is given as "new".
Some of the species that are classified in the Red Lists are registered in our study in quite high numbers and on many roofs: Attulus penicillatus (>20 roofs), Drassyllus praeficus (10), Steatoda albomaculata (16) and Zelotes exiguus (>20). This indicates that these species seem to be well established, even if two of them Attulus penicillatus and Steatoda albomaculata were reported only "rarely" before. However, for both, there is a further note on its existence near Basel in Bauer & Höfer (2017). Moreover, Attulus penicillatus was already registered in five out of six investigated roofs in Brenneisen & Hänggi (2006).
According to the Nentwig et al. (2022) Agyneta simplicitarsis is "very rarely found". This is somewhat in contrast to the fact that in the region of Basel the species seems to be quite well distributed. We postulate that this has to do with the fact that Agyneta simplicitaris is mainly active in autumn and winter and thus is only caught in projects that last at least over the whole growing season. The frequency of recordings therefore may rather be due to methodological bias. Similar methodological bias may be true for the other regionally "established" species Argenna subnigra, Drassyllus praeficus, Xerolycosa miniata, Xysticus acerbus and Zelotes exiguus.
A special case is Steatoda albomaculata, one of the very abundant and frequent species of this investigation. The reason for its classification as "vulnerable" on the Red List of Baden-Württemberg (Nährig et al. 2003) does not seem to Tab. 1: Species with a classification in the Red Lists of Baden-Württemberg (Nährig et al. 2003) and/or Germany (Blick et al. 2016) or species new to Germany since the most recent Red List published. Indicated are the numbers of males and females caught in our study and the estimated status of the species in the region around Basel (various published and unpublished data)

Species
Red List Baden-Würtemberg Red List Germany )) (( Region Green roofs seem to have a certain potential as replacement sites of endangered habitats.

Neobionts on green roofs
Neobionts (species only recently recorded in a region) may be subdivided in two groups: 1) alien species originating from foreign continents and 2) species from southern regions (i.e. south of the Alps) that have shown a northward spreading during recent decades. The classification as "alien species" is in accordance with "Spiders of Europe" (Nentwig et al. 2022), while "northward spreading" is classified according to different publications. In our study we found representatives of both groups: four alien species and fourteen southern species (Tab. 2).
Four species are true alien species. One of these, Ostearius melanopygius, originally described as being from New Zealand (today it is thought to originate from South America (WSC 2022)) has been known in Europe since 1906. It was registered for the first time near London. Its spread in Europe was summarised in Růžička (1995). Even if widespread in Europe, its occurrence is rather scattered. We found it in seven sites on four buildings. The situation is totally different with Mermessus trilobatus. This species was first recorded in Germany in 1981 (Dumpert & Platen 1985) and then in southern and northern Switzerland in 1988 (Hänggi 1990). Today it can be found in every larger collection from any open habitat. Current overviews are given in Hirna (2017) and Narimanov et al. (2022). In our investigation, the species was found in 28 sites on 15 buildings. Erigone autumnalis was registered for the first time in Europe in southern Switzerland (Hänggi 1990(Hänggi , 1993. A good overview of its spread in Europe is given in Déjean & Danflous (2017). Erigone dentosa was only recorded a few years ago (Kekenbosch & Baert 2013). For details, see above.
Fifteen species seem to have enlarged their natural distribution from the Mediterranean northwards during recent decades (Blick et al. 2016, Nentwig et al. 2022. It is supposed that this is connected to climate warming, but could also be related to an augmentation of south-north traffic. Independent of the pathway of their appearance north of the Alps, it is obvious that especially the Upper Rhine Plain is a region with ecological conditions comparable to the ones south of the Alps. Of special interest are the first records north of the Alps for Erigone autumnalis and Robertus mediterraneus. Erigone autumnalis was found on all four sites of the investigated building in Aarau (Telli) with 3 )) and 2 (( already in 2018, but much more in 2019, but also 1 ) in 2019 in one site in Basel (St. Jakobshalle). The single female of Robertus mediterraneus (Fig. 6) was caught on the green roof of the school building "Schoren" that was constructed only in 2017 ( Fig. 7) with 10-15 cm of sandy gravel with compost and lava-pumice. The seeds stem from a nearby nature conservation area (Reinacher Heide). It will be of interest if this single female really represents a population of the species or if it is only a displaced specimen.

Further faunistic and taxonomic comments on some other species Pardosa tenuipes
In Central Europe, Pardosa tenuipes was not distinguished from Pardosa proxima (C. L. Koch, 1847) for decades. It was only a few years ago that Isaia et al. (2018) gave clear criteria to separate the two species morphologically. Here we found P. tenuipes in 26 out of the 33 sites in Basel and Aarau (271 )  Switzerland to Dysdera kropfi Řezáč, 2018 with the remark "Other material examined that may belong to this species (erythrina/kropfi morphotype but no karyological data available)". In contrast, all the German records are assigned to D. erythrina, as is the one from Freiburg im Breisgau. Geographically and ecologically Freiburg im Breisgau and Basel are very similar and quite often their species compositions are the same. Because the two species cannot be distinguished morphologically, we assigned our material to D. erythrina sensu lato.

Conclusions
As shown in the photos of some of the sites investigated (Figs. 1,2,5,7,8) habitats on green roofs may be quite diverse. However, all these habitats have in common the fact that the substrate is rather thin with a maximum thickness of 30 cm. Therefore, these habitats are limited in terms of water retention and the plants are unable to draw on water from greater soil depths with their roots during dry periods. Consequently, the vegetation density is often very low with open and bare areas, as for example in pioneer habitats such as riversides caused by river dynamics. A typical habitat type in the natural Upper Rhine valley used to be gravel and sand banks along the free running, meandering Rhine. The plant species compositions on green roofs also have similarities to rocky vegetations in mountainous areas with different soil cover depths or prairie landscapes (Brenneisen 2009). After the restructuring and canalization of the Rhine (and smaller tributaries) this habitat type has nearly disappeared. As our results on spiders on green roofs show (26 species on the red lists of Germany or Baden-Württemberg), there is, to a certain degree, the potential to create replacements of this lost habitat type, as was previously shown for ground beetles (Brenneisen 2009, Pétremand et al. 2018a. Of course, all these green roofs are new habitats, built or at least installed only a few years ago, like natural pioneer habitats after a disturbance process. All these habitats have to be colonised in a first step and only later will a typical species community evolve. This may explain why four of the species are alien species with a high potential of colonising new Tab. 2: Neobiont spider species on green roofs in Basel and Aarau. Indicated are the numbers of males and females caught in our study and the estimated status of the species in the region around Basel (based on various published and unpublished data)

Species
Alien species Spreading northwards )) (( habitats and 14 species, actually enlarging their distribution north wards, find new habitats on green roofs. It appears to us that the green roofs also may be very good stepping-stones for potentially invasive species as are, e.g. logistic and garden centers (Hänggi & Straub 2016). These findings can underline already known processes of invasive plant species being introduced into urban areas based on the numerous pioneer habitats created by human activities disturbing and opening surfaces. Most of the successful non-native colonisers are pioneer species.

Collinsia inerrans
With two years of observation of the different roofs we are not able to assess which effect is greater: roofs offering protection of endangered species or roofs as stepping-stones for new invaders that could eventually eliminate the endangered native species. Only a longer survey on different roofs will bring a clear answer, showing which species will become permanently established. Certainly, a milestone regarding how conservation goals can be achieved on green roofs with a special substrate construction is shown in Wollishofen/Zurich (Brenneisen 2006). Three green roofs that are older than 100 years reflect the species richness of an agricultural region of the early 20 th century (Landolt 2001), stipulated to be protected by the canton with similar importance to conservation sites on the ground.