Abstract

Rapidly increasing urbanisation is one of the most significant anthropogenic environmental changes which can affect demographic traits of animal populations, for example resulting in reduced reproductive success. The food limitation hypothesis suggests that the shortage of high-quality nestling food in cities is a major factor responsible for the reduced reproductive performance in insectivorous birds. To study this explanation, we collected data on the parental provisioning behaviour of urban and forest great tits (Parus major) in three years that varied both in caterpillar availability (the main food of great tit nestlings) and in reproductive success of the birds. In all years, urban parents provisioned caterpillars in a smaller proportion to their nestlings, but the total amount of food per nestling (estimated by the volumes of all prey items) did not differ between habitats. In the two years with much lower reproductive success in urban than forest habitats, urban parents had higher provisioning rates, but provided more non-arthropod food and brought smaller prey items than forest parents. In the year with reduced habitat difference in reproductive success, urban parents were able to compensate for the scarcity of caterpillars by provisioning other arthropods rather than non-arthropod food, and by delivering larger preys than in the other years. Specifically, in this latter year, caterpillars provisioned by urban pairs were cc. twice as large as in the other two years, and were similar in size to caterpillars provisioned in the forest broods. These results show that although urban great tit parents can provide the same quantity of food per nestling as forest parents by reducing their brood size and increasing the per capita feeding rates for nestlings, they cannot compensate fully for the scarcity of high-quality preys (caterpillars) in poor years. In some years, however, favourable conditions for urban caterpillar development can greatly reduce food limitation in cities, allowing urban birds to achieve higher reproductive success. We suggest that urban green areas designed and managed in a way to facilitate conditions for phytophagous arthropods could improve habitat quality for urban birds.

Highlights

  • Increasing urbanisation is one of the most significant anthropogenic environmental changes which can affect demographic traits of animal populations, for example resulting in reduced reproductive success

  • These detrimental effects of urbanisation are often explained by the food limitation hypothesis, which proposes that the low availability of high-quality food for offspring is a major driver of the reduced reproductive success in urban a­ reas[13,14,15,16]

  • In the case of the non-caterpillar fraction of the nestling food, we found that the proportions of the two food categories differed both between sites and years, the site × year interaction was not significant (Fig. 2, Table 2a)

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Summary

Introduction

Increasing urbanisation is one of the most significant anthropogenic environmental changes which can affect demographic traits of animal populations, for example resulting in reduced reproductive success. Insectivorous birds provide a well-documented example, because several studies showed that their populations often have inferior reproductive success in urban compared to more natural h­ abitats[3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12] These detrimental effects of urbanisation are often explained by the food limitation hypothesis, which proposes that the low availability of high-quality food for offspring is a major driver of the reduced reproductive success in urban a­ reas[13,14,15,16]. Lease and ­Wolf[37] found that the lipid content of arthropods shows an isometric scaling relationship with respect to their body mass, resulting in a proportionately larger quantity of nutrients (e.g. lipids) in large compared to smaller arthropods

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