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  4. Urban landscape organization is associated with species-specific traits in European birds
 
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Urban landscape organization is associated with species-specific traits in European birds

Type
Journal article
Language
English
Date issued
2024
Author
Ibáñez-Álamo, Juan Diego
Izquierdo, Lucía
Mourocq, Emeline
Benedetti, Yanina
Kaisanlahti-Jokimäki, Marja-Liisa
Jokimäki, Jukka
Morelli, Federico
Rubio, Enrique
Pérez-Contreras, Tomás
Sprau, Philipp
Suhonen, Jukka
Tryjanowski, Piotr 
Díaz, Mario
Faculty
Wydział Medycyny Weterynaryjnej i Nauk o Zwierzętach
PBN discipline
biological sciences
Journal
Science of the Total Environment
ISSN
0048-9697
DOI
10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.167937
Volume
908
Number
January 2024
Pages from-to
art. 167937
Abstract (EN)
Urbanization is one of the main current drivers of the global biodiversity loss. Cities are usually developed in a gradient between land-sharing (low density housing with small and fragmented green areas) and land-sparing areas (high density housing with large and non-fragmented green patches) depending on the spatial organization of urban attributes. Previous studies have indicated differences in biodiversity between these two urban development types, but mechanisms underlying these differences are inadequately understood. In this context, the landscape features of each urban development type may select for organisms with specific traits. To analyze it, we quantified birds in 9 European cities during the breeding and wintering season, collected species-specific traits and performed Bayesian comparative analyses. We found that birds living in land-sparing areas had a higher reproductive investment and a higher nesting specialization than birds living in land-sharing areas during the breeding season. Typical birds from land-sparing urban areas during winter are fast-lived species. Our results indicate that urban development type could have an important role selecting animal traits and provides useful information on how to build more biodiversity-friendly cities.
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