Urbanization affects neophilia and risk-taking at bird-feeders

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...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tryjanowski, Piotr, Møller, Anders Pape, Morelli, Federico, Biaduń, Waldemar, Brauze, Tomasz, Ciach, Michał, Czechowski, Paweł, Czyż, Stanisław, Dulisz, Beata, Goławski, Artur, Hetmański, Tomasz, Indykiewicz, Piotr, Mitrus, Cezary, Myczko, Łukasz, Nowakowski, Jacek J., Polakowski, Michał, Takacs, Viktoria, Wysocki, Dariusz, Zduniak, Piotr
Format: Online
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2016
Online Access:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4921825/
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Summary: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.