Abstract
The concept of a pace-of-life syndrome describes inter- and intraspecific variation in several life-history traits along a slow-to-fast pace-of-life continuum, with long lifespans, low reproductive and metabolic rates, and elevated somatic defences at the slow end of the continuum and the opposite traits at the fast end. Pace-of-life can vary in relation to local environmental conditions (e.g. latitude, altitude), and here we propose that this variation may also occur along an anthropogenically modified environmental gradient. Based on a body of literature supporting the idea that city birds have longer lifespans, we predict that urban birds have a slower pace-of-life compared to rural birds and thus invest more in self maintenance and less in annual reproduction. Our statistical meta-analysis of two key traits related to pace-of-life, survival and breeding investment (clutch size), indicated that urban birds generally have higher survival, but smaller clutch sizes. The latter finding (smaller clutches in urban habitats) seemed to be mainly a characteristic of smaller passerines. We also reviewed urbanization studies on other traits that can be associated with pace-of-life and are related to either reproductive investment or self-maintenance. Though sample sizes were generally too small to conduct formal meta-analyses, published literature suggests that urban birds tend to produce lower-quality sexual signals and invest more in offspring care. The latter finding is in agreement with the adult survival hypothesis, proposing that higher adult survival prospects favour investment in fewer offspring per year. According to our hypothesis, differences in age structure should arise between urban and rural populations, providing a novel alternative explanation for physiological differences and earlier breeding. We encourage more research investigating how telomere dynamics, immune defences, antioxidants and oxidative damage in different tissues vary along the urbanization gradient, and suggest that applying pace-of-life framework to studies of variation in physiological traits along the urbanization gradient might be the next direction to improve our understanding of urbanization as an evolutionary process.
Highlights
Organisms exhibit remarkable diversity in their life histories, many potential combinations of life-history traits do not occur in nature (Ricklefs & Wikelski, 2002).This phenomenon arises from functional constraints among life-history attributes and the fact that limited resources must be allocated among competing demands (Gadgil & Bossert, 1970)
The pace-of-life syndrome hypothesis suggests that a given set of ecological conditions favours a particular life-history strategy that could in turn affect a whole series of coevolved reproductive, behavioural, and physiological traits (Wikelski et al, 2003, Martin et al, 2006, Réale et al, 2010)
We review a number of other traits that can be associated with pace-of-life, but have so far not been studied enough in the context of urbanization for a formal meta-analysis
Summary
Organisms exhibit remarkable diversity in their life histories, many potential combinations of life-history traits do not occur in nature (Ricklefs & Wikelski, 2002). According to the adult survival hypothesis stating that higher adult survival prospects favour an increased investment in a smaller number of offspring (Martin, 1996; Martin et al, 2000; McNamara et al, 2008), we predict that urban birds would invest more in offspring quality, whereas rural birds would invest more in offspring quantity We summarize how these suites of traits covary within the pace-of-life syndrome framework (Table 2) and describe in detail the published studies to date
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