Abstract

Urban bird communities have higher densities but lower diversity compared with wildlands. However, recent studies show that residential urban yards with native plantings have higher native bird diversity compared with yards with exotic vegetation. Here we tested whether landscape designs also affect bird foraging behavior. We estimated foraging decisions by measuring the giving-up densities (GUD; amount of food resources remaining when the final forager quits foraging on an artificial food patch, i.e seed trays) in residential yards in Phoenix, AZ, USA. We assessed how two yard designs (mesic: lush, exotic vegetation; xeric: drought-tolerant and native vegetation) differed in foraging costs. Further, we developed a statistical model to calculate GUDs for every species visiting the seed tray. Birds foraging in mesic yards depleted seed trays to a lower level (i.e. had lower GUDs) compared to birds foraging in xeric yards. After accounting for bird densities, the lower GUDs in mesic yards appeared largely driven by invasive and synanthropic species. Furthermore, behavioral responses of individual species were affected by yard design. Species visiting trays in both yard designs had lower GUDs in mesic yards. Differences in resource abundance (i.e., alternative resources more abundant and of higher quality in xeric yards) contributed to our results, while predation costs associated with foraging did not. By enhancing the GUD, a common method for assessing the costs associated with foraging, our statistical model provided insights into how individual species and bird densities influenced the GUD. These differences we found in foraging behavior were indicative of differences in habitat quality, and thus our study lends additional support for native landscapes to help reverse the loss of urban bird diversity.

Highlights

  • Urbanization alters the composition and function of landscapes, rendering certain areas unsuitable for native wildlife [1]

  • Eleven species were recorded in mesic yards and ten species were recorded in xeric yards (Fig. 2)

  • Yard Design Foraging decisions differed between mesic and xeric yards whereby birds foraging in mesic yards consumed more seed and quit artificial food patches later than birds foraging in xeric yards

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Summary

Introduction

Urbanization alters the composition and function of landscapes, rendering certain areas unsuitable for native wildlife [1]. Studies have shown that within urban areas, landscape designs that mimic the wildlands being replaced (i.e. more nativelike) are more diverse compared with landscapes with exotic vegetation (i.e. more urban [6,7,8]). Shochat et al [10] compared individual foraging behavior between urban and desert bird communities in Phoenix, Arizona They quantified the quitting point of foraging by measuring the giving-up densities (GUD: the density of resources remaining after foraging stops; [11]) for the final forager visiting artificial food patches. This study provided an excellent reference for comparing urban and wildland habitats in terms of productivity, structure and function They found that urban birds exhibited lower GUDs (consumed more resources) than desert birds

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