| Literature DB >> 29795350 |
Thomas Merckx1, Caroline Souffreau2, Aurélien Kaiser3, Lisa F Baardsen4, Thierry Backeljau4,5, Dries Bonte6, Kristien I Brans2, Marie Cours7, Maxime Dahirel6,8, Nicolas Debortoli9, Katrien De Wolf5, Jessie M T Engelen2, Diego Fontaneto10, Andros T Gianuca2,11,12, Lynn Govaert2, Frederik Hendrickx5,6, Janet Higuti13, Luc Lens6, Koen Martens7,14, Hans Matheve6, Erik Matthysen4, Elena Piano5,15, Rose Sablon5, Isa Schön7,16, Karine Van Doninck9, Luc De Meester2, Hans Van Dyck3.
Abstract
Body size is intrinsically linked to metabolic rate and life-history traits, and is a crucial determinant of food webs and community dynamics1,2. The increased temperatures associated with the urban-heat-island effect result in increased metabolic costs and are expected to drive shifts to smaller body sizes 3 . Urban environments are, however, also characterized by substantial habitat fragmentation 4 , which favours mobile species. Here, using a replicated, spatially nested sampling design across ten animal taxonomic groups, we show that urban communities generally consist of smaller species. In addition, although we show urban warming for three habitat types and associated reduced community-weighted mean body sizes for four taxa, three taxa display a shift to larger species along the urbanization gradients. Our results show that the general trend towards smaller-sized species is overruled by filtering for larger species when there is positive covariation between size and dispersal, a process that can mitigate the low connectivity of ecological resources in urban settings 5 . We thus demonstrate that the urban-heat-island effect and urban habitat fragmentation are associated with contrasting community-level shifts in body size that critically depend on the association between body size and dispersal. Because body size determines the structure and dynamics of ecological networks 1 , such shifts may affect urban ecosystem function.Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29795350 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-018-0140-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962