Interactive effects of rising temperatures and urbanisation on birds across different climate zones: A mechanistic perspective

Author:

Sumasgutner Petra12ORCID,Cunningham Susan J.2ORCID,Hegemann Arne3ORCID,Amar Arjun2ORCID,Watson Hannah3ORCID,Nilsson Johan F.3ORCID,Andersson Martin N.3ORCID,Isaksson Caroline3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Konrad Lorenz Research Centre, Core Facility for Behavior and Cognition, Department of Behavioral & Cognitive Biology University of Vienna Vienna Austria

2. FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology, DSI‐NRF Centre of Excellence University of Cape Town Cape Town South Africa

3. Department of Biology Lund University Lund Sweden

Abstract

AbstractClimate change and urbanisation are among the most pervasive and rapidly growing threats to biodiversity worldwide. However, their impacts are usually considered in isolation, and interactions are rarely examined. Predicting species' responses to the combined effects of climate change and urbanisation, therefore, represents a pressing challenge in global change biology. Birds are important model taxa for exploring the impacts of both climate change and urbanisation, and their behaviour and physiology have been well studied in urban and non‐urban systems. This understanding should allow interactive effects of rising temperatures and urbanisation to be inferred, yet considerations of these interactions are almost entirely lacking from empirical research. Here, we synthesise our current understanding of the potential mechanisms that could affect how species respond to the combined effects of rising temperatures and urbanisation, with a focus on avian taxa. We discuss potential interactive effects to motivate future in‐depth research on this critically important, yet overlooked, aspect of global change biology. Increased temperatures are a pronounced consequence of both urbanisation (through the urban heat island effect) and climate change. The biological impact of this warming in urban and non‐urban systems will likely differ in magnitude and direction when interacting with other factors that typically vary between these habitats, such as resource availability (e.g. water, food and microsites) and pollution levels. Furthermore, the nature of such interactions may differ for cities situated in different climate types, for example, tropical, arid, temperate, continental and polar. Within this article, we highlight the potential for interactive effects of climate and urban drivers on the mechanistic responses of birds, identify knowledge gaps and propose promising future research avenues. A deeper understanding of the behavioural and physiological mechanisms mediating species' responses to urbanisation and rising temperatures will provide novel insights into ecology and evolution under global change and may help better predict future population responses.

Funder

Claude Leon Foundation

Vetenskapsrådet

Svenska Forskningsrådet Formas

Austrian Science Fund

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Environmental Science,Ecology,Environmental Chemistry,Global and Planetary Change

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