Authors
Noraine Salleh Hudin, Diederik Strubbe, Aimeric Teyssier, Liesbeth De Neve, Joël White, Geert Paul Jules Janssens, Luc Lens
Publication date
2016/7/26
Journal
Behavioral Ecology
Pages
arw108
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
Urbanization constitutes one of the most profound forms of land-use change and strongly affects global biodiversity and ecosystem functioning. Expansion of urban areas typically leads to species loss but may also induce more subtle changes in species dynamics through selection or plasticity. Using a dual correlative (field) and experimental (aviary) approach, we here show that free-ranging urban house sparrows in southern France were smaller and lighter than their rural counterparts after allometric scaling, whereas 2 independent indices of nutritional (feather growth rates) and developmental (feather asymmetry) stress did not vary with urbanization. When subjecting these individuals to urban or rural diets in a highly predictable, controlled setting, rural but not urban sparrows decreased their body mass, independent of diet type, to the extent that initial scaled mass differences between urban and rural birds …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
N Salleh Hudin, D Strubbe, A Teyssier, L De Neve… - Behavioral Ecology, 2016