Environmental constraints can explain clutch size differences between urban and forest blue tits: Insights from an egg removal experiment.

IF 3.5 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ECOLOGY Journal of Animal Ecology Pub Date : 2024-09-01 DOI:10.1111/1365-2656.14171
Mark D Pitt, Norah S S Alhowiti, Claire J Branston, Eugenio Carlon, Jelle J Boonekamp, Davide M Dominoni, Pablo Capilla-Lasheras
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Abstract

Urban environments present novel ecological challenges to wild species. In birds, urban populations generally exhibit reduced clutch sizes compared to forest populations. However, whether smaller urban clutches are adaptive or a result of environmental constraints is unclear. To investigate these two hypotheses, we quantified the ability of urban and non-urban blue tits (Cyanistes caeruleus) to lay new eggs after an experimental manipulation aimed to increase egg production. We removed the first four eggs laid by urban and forest birds to test their ability to produce new eggs. If the urban environment imposes constraints on egg production, we predicted that urban birds would not lay new eggs. If the small clutches of urban birds are an adaptive response, we predicted they would lay new eggs to reach the optimal clutch size for the environment. Consistent with the environmental constraint hypothesis, our results suggest that urban females do not lay new eggs to the same extent as forest birds following egg removal. Forest birds laid approximately two new eggs after our experimental manipulation, while urban birds laid approximately 0.36 new eggs following egg removal. Our manipulation resulted in a brood reduction in the urban experimental nests, yet there was no difference in the number of fledged offspring between urban control and experimental nests. This suggests that females might be misjudging urban habitat quality and produce a clutch with more eggs than nestlings they can rear. Overall, our results suggest that environmental constraints could limit the number of eggs that urban females lay, generating urban versus non-urban differences in this trait.

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环境制约因素可以解释城市蓝山雀和森林蓝山雀的窝大小差异:摘蛋实验的启示
城市环境给野生物种带来了新的生态挑战。在鸟类中,与森林种群相比,城市种群通常表现出较小的产卵量。然而,城市中较小的产卵量是适应性的还是环境限制的结果尚不清楚。为了探究这两个假设,我们对城市和非城市蓝山雀(Cyanistes caeruleus)在进行旨在提高产卵量的实验操作后产下新卵的能力进行了量化。我们取出了城市和森林鸟类产下的前四个蛋,以测试它们产新蛋的能力。如果城市环境限制了产卵量,我们预测城市鸟类不会产新卵。如果城市鸟类的小窝是一种适应性反应,我们预测它们会产新蛋,以达到环境中最佳的窝产蛋量。与环境限制假说一致,我们的结果表明,城市雌鸟在取卵后产下新卵的程度与森林鸟类不同。森林鸟类在我们的实验操作后产下了大约两枚新卵,而城市鸟类在移卵后产下了大约 0.36 枚新卵。我们的操作导致城市实验巢的育雏量减少,但城市对照巢和实验巢的后代羽数却没有差异。这表明,雌鸟可能对城市栖息地的质量作出了错误判断,因此产下的一窝卵多于其所能哺育的雏鸟。总之,我们的研究结果表明,环境因素可能会限制城市雌鸟产卵的数量,从而导致城市与非城市雌鸟在这一特征上的差异。
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来源期刊
Journal of Animal Ecology
Journal of Animal Ecology 环境科学-动物学
CiteScore
9.10
自引率
4.20%
发文量
188
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Journal of Animal Ecology publishes the best original research on all aspects of animal ecology, ranging from the molecular to the ecosystem level. These may be field, laboratory and theoretical studies utilising terrestrial, freshwater or marine systems.
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