| Literature DB >> 27346383 |
Piotr Tryjanowski1, Anders Pape Møller2, Federico Morelli3,4, Waldemar Biaduń5, Tomasz Brauze6, Michał Ciach7, Paweł Czechowski8, Stanisław Czyż9, Beata Dulisz10, Artur Goławski11, Tomasz Hetmański12, Piotr Indykiewicz13, Cezary Mitrus14, Łukasz Myczko1, Jacek J Nowakowski10, Michał Polakowski15, Viktoria Takacs1, Dariusz Wysocki16, Piotr Zduniak17.
Abstract
Urban environments cover vast areas with a high density of humans and their dogs and cats causing problems for exploitation of new resources by wild animals. Such resources facilitate colonization by individuals with a high level of neophilia predicting that urban animals should show more neophilia than rural conspecifics. We provided bird-feeders across urban environments in 14 Polish cities and matched nearby rural habitats, testing whether the presence of a novel item (a brightly coloured green object made out of gum with a tuft of hair) differentially delayed arrival at feeders in rural compared to urban habitats. The presence of a novel object reduced the number of great tits Parus major, but also the total number of all species of birds although differentially so in urban compared to rural areas. That was the case independent of the potentially confounding effects of temperature, population density of birds, and the abundance of cats, dogs and pedestrians. The number of great tits and the total number of birds attending feeders increased in urban compared to rural areas independent of local population density of birds. This implies that urban birds have high levels of neophilia allowing them to readily exploit unpredictable resources in urban environments.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27346383 PMCID: PMC4921825 DOI: 10.1038/srep28575
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Bird species and number of individuals recorded at bird-feeders.
| Species | No. observations | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| 1330 | 72.09 | |
| 116 | 6.29 | |
| 111 | 6.02 | |
| 97 | 5.26 | |
| 36 | 1.95 | |
| 28 | 1.52 | |
| 28 | 1.52 | |
| 27 | 1.46 | |
| 21 | 1.14 | |
| 18 | 0.98 | |
| 9 | 0.49 | |
| 9 | 0.49 | |
| 5 | 0.27 | |
| 4 | 0.22 | |
| 2 | 0.11 | |
| 1 | 0.05 | |
| 1 | 0.05 | |
| 1 | 0.05 | |
| 1 | 0.05 |
GLMM for the number of great tits at bird-feeders in relation to temperature, habitat (urban or rural), presence of novel object, density of great tits, number of cats, number of dogs, number of pedestrians and the interaction between habitat and presence of object as fixed effects.
| Effects | Estimate | SE | Effect size | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intercept | 0.399 | 0.324 | 1.233 | 0.218 | |
| Temperature | −0.017 | 0.010 | −1.769 | 0.077 | 0.140 |
| Early or late trial | 0.176 | 0.102 | 1.716 | 0.086 | 0.136 |
City was used as a random effect with a variance of 1.16 and a standard deviation of 1.08. The number of observations was 160 and the number of cities 14. Effect size is the z-transformed Pearson product-moment correlation coefficient. Statistically significant terms are shown in bold font.
GLMM for the total number of birds at bird-feeders in relation to temperature, habitat (urban or rural), presence of a novel object, density of all bird species, number of cats, number of dogs, number of pedestrians and the interaction between habitat and presence of a novel object as fixed effects.
| Effects | Estimate | SE | Effect size | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intercept | 0.978 | 0.284 | 3.446 | 0.0006 | |
| Temperature | −0.003 | 0.008 | −0.353 | 0.724 | 0.028 |
| Early or late trial | 0.107 | 0.085 | 1.251 | 0.211 | 0.099 |
City was used as a random effect with a variance of 0.94 and a standard deviation of 0.97. The number of observations was 160 and the number of cities 14. Effect size is the z-transformed Pearson product-moment correlation coefficient. Statistically significant terms are shown in bold font.
Figure 1Number of individual birds at feeders in relation to urbanisation and presence of a novel object.
Box plots show medians, quartiles, 5- and 95-percentiles and extreme values.
Figure 2Number of individual birds at feeders in relation to number of cats and dogs.
Box plots show medians (black horizontal bars), mean (empty rhombus), quartiles, 5- and 95-percentiles and extreme values.
Figure 3Bird-feeder with greenfinches Chloris chloris in the presence of the novel object.