Garbage in may not equal garbage out: sex mediates effects of ‘junk food’ in a synanthropic species

Q2 Social Sciences Journal of Urban Ecology Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1093/jue/juad014
Elizabeth M Ng, A. Pidgeon, Elena H. West, M. Z. Peery, Kristin M. Brunk
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Abstract

Human influence on ecosystems is rapidly expanding, and one consequence is the increased availability of human food subsidies to wildlife. Human food subsidies like refuse and food scraps are widely hypothesized to be ‘junk food’ that is nutritionally incomplete; however, the impacts of ‘junk foods’ on the health and fitness of individual organisms remain unclear. In this study, we aimed to understand how human food consumption affects the body condition and fecundity of a generalist predator, the Steller’s jay (Cyanocitta stelleri). We used stable isotope analysis to quantify individual human food consumption (using δ13C as a proxy), estimated individual body condition based on body mass and feather growth bar width and assessed jay fecundity. Adults consumed more human food than juveniles on average, and we observed sex-specific responses to human food use where male body condition tended to increase, whereas female body condition tended to decline with human food consumption. However, fecundity was not strongly related. Thus, we found some evidence for the ‘junk food’ hypothesis in this system, which suggests that human foods may not be an equal replacement for natural foods from a nutritional perspective, especially for females. Human foods tend to be carbohydrate rich, but protein poor, which may benefit males because they are larger and limited overall by calorie intake. Females, particularly reproducing females, are more nutritionally limited and thus may experience fewer benefits from ‘junk food’. Our study advances knowledge of human–wildlife interactions by increasing the resolution of our understanding of the fitness benefits, or detriments, experienced by individuals that consume human foods.
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垃圾输入可能不等于垃圾输出:性调节了“垃圾食品”对一个共生物种的影响
人类对生态系统的影响正在迅速扩大,其后果之一是人类对野生动物的粮食补贴增加。人们普遍认为垃圾和食物残渣等人类食物补贴是营养不完整的“垃圾食品”;然而,“垃圾食品”对个体生物健康和体质的影响尚不清楚。在这项研究中,我们的目的是了解人类的食物消耗如何影响一种多面手捕食者斯特勒松鸦的身体状况和繁殖力。我们使用稳定同位素分析来量化人类个体的食物消耗量(使用δ13C作为代理),根据体重和羽毛生长条宽度估计个体的身体状况,并评估松鸦的繁殖力。成年人平均比青少年摄入更多的人类食物,我们观察到对人类食物使用的性别特异性反应,男性的身体状况往往会增加,而女性的身体状况则往往会随着人类食物的摄入而下降。然而,繁殖力并没有很强的相关性。因此,我们在这个系统中发现了一些“垃圾食品”假说的证据,该假说表明,从营养角度来看,人类食品可能无法平等地替代天然食品,尤其是对女性而言。人类食物往往富含碳水化合物,但蛋白质含量低,这可能对男性有益,因为它们体型较大,总体上受到热量摄入的限制。雌性,尤其是繁殖中的雌性,营养更为有限,因此可能从“垃圾食品”中获得的好处更少。我们的研究通过提高我们对食用人类食物的个体所经历的健康益处或危害的理解,来增进人类与野生动物相互作用的知识。
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来源期刊
Journal of Urban Ecology
Journal of Urban Ecology Social Sciences-Urban Studies
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊最新文献
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