Abstract
AbstractAim: Studies conducted at a global scale are necessary to make general conclusions on the effect of urbanization on trophic interactions and explore how these effects change along latitudinal gradients. Since biotic interactions are more intense at lower latitudes, we predict that the intensity of trophic interactions will decrease in response to urbanization (quantified by human population density), with higher impacts of urbanization at higher latitudes.Location: Global (881 study sites).Time period: 2000-2021.Major taxa studied: Birds, arthropods and woody plants.Methods: We compiled global data on insect herbivory and bird predation from individual studies using similar methodologies, and fitted generalized linear mixed models to test the effect of human population density, latitude and their interaction on these two response variables.Results: The intensity of herbivory and predation decreased with the increase of human population density at lower latitudes, remained unaffected at intermediate latitudes, and increased at higher latitudes.Main conclusions: The effect of human population density on insect herbivory and bird predation consistently varies across latitudes, with a reversal of the pattern at high versus low latitudes.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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