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  4. Behavioral convergence under urbanization: An overlooked dimension of biotic homogenization
 
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Behavioral convergence under urbanization: An overlooked dimension of biotic homogenization

Type
Journal article
Language
English
Date issued
2026
Author
Mikula, Peter
Blumstein, Daniel T.
Tryjanowski, Piotr 
Faculty
Wydział Medycyny Weterynaryjnej i Nauk o Zwierzętach
PBN discipline
biological sciences
Journal
PLoS Biology
ISSN
1544-9173
DOI
10.1371/journal.pbio.3003689
Web address
https://journals.plos.org/plosbiology/article?id=10.1371/journal.pbio.3003689
Volume
24
Number
3
Pages from-to
e3003689
Abstract (EN)
A variety of human activities, especially urbanization, are not only homogenizing species composition but also eroding behavioral diversity. This Essay introduces the concept of behavioral homogenization: the human-driven convergence of behavioral traits across individuals, populations, and species across space and time. Global examples of fear responses, foraging, communication, activity patterns, social behavior, cognition and exploration, habitat use, breeding-site choice, migration, and heterospecific interaction networks are used to argue that spatial and temporal beta-diversity in behavior is shrinking in human-dominated landscapes. Ecological and evolutionary consequences, including for animal cultures and human–wildlife conflict, are outlined and opportunities to quantify and integrate behavioral homogenization into biodiversity conservation and management are highlighted.
License
cc-bycc-by CC-BY - Attribution
Open access date
March 2, 2026
Fundusze Europejskie
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