Abstract

Larus gull species have proven adaptable to urbanization and due to their generalist feeding behaviors, they provide useful opportunities to study how urban environments impact foraging behavior and host-associated microbiota. We evaluated how urbanization influenced the foraging behavior and microbiome characteristics of breeding herring gulls (Larus argentatus) at three different colonies on the east coast of the United States. Study colonies represented high, medium and low degrees of urbanization, respectively. At all colonies, gulls frequently foraged at landfills and in other urban environments, but both the use of urban environments and gull foraging metrics differed with the degree of urbanization. Gulls at the more urban colonies used urban environments more frequently, showed higher rates of site fidelity and took shorter trips. Gulls at less urban colonies used a greater diversity of habitat types and foraged offshore. We observed high microbial diversity at all colonies, though microbial diversity was highest at the least urban colony where gulls used a wider variety of foraging habitats. This suggests that gulls may acquire a wider range of bacteria when visiting a higher variety of foraging sites. Our findings highlight the influence of urban habitats on gull movements and microbiome composition and diversity during the breeding season and represent the first application of amplicon sequence variants, an objective and repeatable method of bacterial classification, to study the microbiota of a seabird species.

Highlights

  • Cities are rapidly expanding, and the consequent urbanization of natural landscapes has widespread effects on wildlife ecology, biodiversity and ecosystem structure and function [1,2,3]

  • Tag deployments at Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge (JB) were slightly longer on average, resulting in a larger number of trips observed at that colony

  • Gulls at all colonies travelled to landfills; the proportion of gulls foraging at landfills during at least one foraging trip was 40% at both JB and Tuckernuck Island (TN) and 6% at Young’s Island (YI) (Fig 3)

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Summary

Introduction

The consequent urbanization of natural landscapes has widespread effects on wildlife ecology, biodiversity and ecosystem structure and function [1,2,3]. For animals living in urban environments, interactions with urban landscapes can influence animal movement, foraging behavior, predation risk, and reproductive success [4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11]. Despite the rapid increase of urbanization and its subsequent impact on wildlife ecology at a global scale [12], ecologists typically focus research on animals in natural environments, whereas studies of animal behavior within urban environments are more limited [12,13,14].

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