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Urban tolerance does not protect against population decline in North American birds


Abstract Population declines of organisms are widespread and severe, but some species' populations have remained stable, or even increased. The reasons some species are less vulnerable to population decline than others are not well understood. Species that tolerate urban environments often have a broader environmental tolerance, which, along with their ability to tolerate one of the most human-modified habitats (i.e. cities), might allow them to persist in the face of diverse anthropogenic challenges. Here, we examined the relationship between urban tolerance and annual population trajectories for 397 North American bird species. Surprisingly, we found that urban tolerance was unrelated to species' population trajectories. The lack of a relationship between urban tolerance and population trajectories may reflect other factors driving population declines independent of urban tolerance, challenges that are amplified in cities (e.g. climate warming, disease), and other human impacts (e.g. conservation efforts, broad-scale land-use changes) that have benefitted some urban-avoidant species. Overall, our results illustrate that urban tolerance does not protect species against population decline.
Authors Julianna A. Petrenko ORCID , Paul R. Martin ORCID , Rachel E. Fanelli University of WyomingORCID , Frances Bonier ORCID
Journal Info Royal Society | Biology Letters , vol: 20 , iss: 1
Publication Date 1/1/2024
ISSN 1744-9561
TypeKeyword Image article
Open Access closed Closed Access
DOI https://doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2023.0507
KeywordsKeyword Image Population Dynamics (Score: 0.508)