Affiliation:
1. Department of Biology Lund University Lund Sweden
2. School of Biodiversity One Health and Veterinary Medicine University of Glasgow Glasgow UK
3. Department of Plant Biology and Ecology University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU) Leioa Spain
4. CEFE Univ Montpellier CNRS EPHE IRD Montpellier France
5. Evolution and Conservation Biology Research Group Department of Biodiversity Ecology and Evolution Faculty of Biology Universidad Complutense de Madrid Madrid Spain
Abstract
Abstract
Urbanisation is accelerating across the globe, transforming landscapes, presenting organisms with novel challenges, shaping phenotypes and impacting fitness. Urban individuals are claimed to have duller carotenoid‐based colouration, compared to their non‐urban counterparts, the so‐called ‘urban dullness’ phenomenon. However, at the intraspecific level, this generalisation is surprisingly inconsistent and often based on comparisons of single urban/non‐urban populations or studies from a limited geographical area.
Here, we combine correlational, experimental and meta‐analytical data on a common songbird, the great tit Parus major, to investigate carotenoid‐based plumage colouration in urban and forest populations across Europe.
We find that, as predicted, urban individuals are paler than forest individuals, although there are large population‐specific differences in the magnitude of the urban‐forest contrast in colouration. Using one focal region (Malmö, Sweden), we reveal population‐specific processes behind plumage colouration differences, which are unlikely to be the result of genetic or early‐life conditions, but instead a consequence of environmental factors acting after fledging.
Finally, our meta‐analysis indicates that the urban dullness phenomenon is well established in the literature, for great tits, with consistent changes in carotenoid‐based plumage traits, particularly carotenoid chroma, in response to anthropogenic disturbances.
Overall, our results provide evidence for uniformity in the ‘urban dullness’ phenomenon but also highlight that the magnitude of the effect on colouration depends on local urban characteristics. Future long‐term replicated studies, covering a wider range of species and feeding guilds, will be essential to further our understanding of the eco‐evolutionary implications of this phenomenon.
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
2 articles.
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