Periodic Reporting for period 1 - urbanbird (Social life in the city: how urbanization affects cooperation and competition among social birds)
Okres sprawozdawczy: 2018-04-01 do 2020-03-31
Human induced environmental change like urbanization, involves a drastic change of the environment and will affect the abundance of resources and thus the costs and benefits of how individuals cooperate and compete for resources. However, how urbanization affects such social behaviour remains unknown. It is important to better understand this, since social behaviours are crucial for an individual’s fitness. Thus, factors affecting social behaviour will have large implications for the dynamics and persistence of populations, and improving knowledge on this topic will help to predict the effects ongoing urbanization will have on species and biodiversity.
The aims of this project were to examine the impacts of urbanization on population dynamics and social behaviour of birds. In addition, a parallel goal of this reintegration fellowship was for the Fellow to re-enter the European academic system and develop skills required to initiate an independent research group.
Further examination of the effect of urbanization on various biometry measurements showed that particularly more social species (house sparrows) show consistent associations with urbanization, with urban individuals being smaller, leaner and having lower body fat, suggesting lower competition in urban areas (BSc thesis). Current work aims to disentangle what aspect (i.e. buildings, roads or distance to city edge) of urbanization is the most important driver of variation in biometry (BSc thesis).
The effect of urbanization on social behavior was examined by conducting behavioural observations on house sparrows (Passer domesticus) at feeding tables in urban and rural areas. This work was implemented within the BSc course in Animal Ecology, whereby students learned how to specify and collect behavioural data in the field. Preliminary results show that urban house sparrows are less efficient foragers, as they spent more time scanning their surroundings when on a feeding table. This work will be continued in further projects.
The Fellow was able to improve her teaching and supervision skills and gain valuable experience in course coordination. Following the Action, the Fellow has obtained a tenure track position at the host institute allowing her to further develop her own research group.