Literature DB >> 23967452

Urban behavioural adaptation.

Colin J Garroway, Ben C Sheldon.   

Abstract

A large and growing proportion of the world is impacted directly by human activities; among the most extreme of these is the spread of urban environments. Environmental change associated with urbanization represents a potentially potent source of selection. While urban environments generally have lowered biodiversity, some clades seem to thrive in urban settings. For example, many members of the bird family Turdidae, known as the ‘truethrushes’ and the blackbird Turdus merula (Fig. 1) in particular, are familiar urban species. Indeed, the colonization of urban environments by blackbirds has become a textbook case study for our understanding of the many ways a wild species can deal with urbanization. In this issue, Mueller et al. (Molecular Ecology, 00, 2013, 00) add to that story by beginning to address the genetic nature of behavioural adaptation of blackbirds colonizing urban areas. They do this by testing for divergence between paired urban and rural samples at a suite of candidate genes with hypothesized effects on behaviours thought to be important for the colonization of urban environments.They find evidence for consistent patterns of divergence at an exonic microsatellite associated with the SERT gene. SERT has a number of hypothesized behavioural effects, including harm avoidance, which may be associated with tolerating the hustle and bustle of urban environments. This is among the first evidence that behavioural differences between urban and rural environments have a genetic basis and this work suggests that urban environments can in some cases exert homogeneous selection pressures.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23967452     DOI: 10.1111/mec.12351

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Ecol        ISSN: 0962-1083            Impact factor:   6.185


  2 in total

1.  A New Framework for Urban Ecology: An Integration of Proximate and Ultimate Responses to Anthropogenic Change.

Authors:  Jenny Q Ouyang; Caroline Isaksson; Chloé Schmidt; Pierce Hutton; Frances Bonier; Davide Dominoni
Journal:  Integr Comp Biol       Date:  2018-11-01       Impact factor: 3.326

2.  Epigenetics and the city: Non-parallel DNA methylation modifications across pairs of urban-forest Great tit populations.

Authors:  Aude E Caizergues; Jeremy Le Luyer; Arnaud Grégoire; Marta Szulkin; Juan-Carlos Senar; Anne Charmantier; Charles Perrier
Journal:  Evol Appl       Date:  2022-01-04       Impact factor: 5.183

  2 in total

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