Abstract

Urbanization is a major driver of the global loss of biodiversity; to mitigate its adverse effects, it is essential to understand what drives species' patterns of habitat use within the urban matrix. While many animal species are known to exhibit sex differences in habitat use, adaptability to the urban landscape is commonly examined at the species level, without consideration of intraspecific differences. The high energetic demands of pregnancy and lactation in female mammals can lead to sexual differences in habitat use, but little is known of how this might affect their response to urbanization. We predicted that female Pipistrellus pygmaeus would show greater selectivity of forging locations within urban woodland in comparison to males at both a local and landscape scale. In line with these predictions, we found there was a lower probability of finding females within woodlands which were poorly connected, highly cluttered, with a higher edge : interior ratio and fewer mature trees. By contrast, habitat quality and the composition of the surrounding landscape were less of a limiting factor in determining male distributions. These results indicate strong sexual differences in the habitat use of fragmented urban woodland, and this has important implications for our understanding of the adaptability of bats and mammals more generally to urbanization.

Highlights

  • Urbanization is driving the fragmentation of landscapes at an unprecedented rate and is a significant contributing factor to the current biodiversity crisis [1]

  • Habitat segregation between sexes can occur because of differences in antipredation behaviour during the breeding period (e.g. Eurasian wild sheep [5]), differences in social motivation to interact that may lead to behavioural incompatibility, physiological differences, or to decrease intraspecific resource competition (e.g. New Zealand sea lion [8]). These behaviours often result in segregation between distinct habitat types; we have relatively little information about whether similar patterns occur within urban landscapes

  • We identified 32 urban woodland study sites in central Scotland using Ordnance Survey digital maps [20], which we surveyed between 19 May 2011 and 1 September 2011

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Summary

Introduction

Urbanization is driving the fragmentation of landscapes at an unprecedented rate and is a significant contributing factor to the current biodiversity crisis [1]. Habitat segregation between sexes can occur because of differences in antipredation behaviour during the breeding period (e.g. Eurasian wild sheep [5]), differences in social motivation to interact that may lead to behavioural incompatibility (e.g. red deer [6]), physiological differences (e.g. pelagic shark [7]), or to decrease intraspecific resource competition (e.g. New Zealand sea lion [8]). These behaviours often result in segregation between distinct habitat types; we have relatively little information about whether similar patterns occur within urban landscapes

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