Abstract
There is a growing interest in the behavioural and life history mechanisms that allow animal species to cope with rapidly expanding urban habitats, which impose frequent proximity to humans. A particular case of behavioral bottleneck (i.e. conflicting interests) faced by animals in urban environments is how they will modulate the defence of their offspring against the potential danger represented by humans, an aspect that has received scarce research attention. We examined the nest defense against humans by a dense breeding population of a raptor, the Black Kite Milvus migrans, within the megacity of Delhi (India). Here, kites live on a diet dominated by human waste and meat offered through religiously motivated bird feeding practices. Nest defense levels increased with the number of offspring, and with the progression of the breeding season. Defense also intensified close to ritual-feeding areas and with increasing human waste in the streets, suggesting synergistic effects of food availability, parental investment, personality-boldness and habituation to humans, with consequent attenuation of fear. Thus, the behavioural response to a perceived threat reflected the spatial mosaic of activity of humans in the city streets, their cultural practices of ritual-feeding, and their waste-management. For synurbic species, at the higher-end spectrum of adaptation to an urban life, human cultural practices and attitudes may well be the most defining dimensions of their urban niche. Our results suggest that, after initial urban colonization, animals may continue to adapt to the typically complex, heterogeneous environments of cities through fine-grained behavioural adjustments to human practices and activities.
Highlights
Rapid, worldwide urbanization is raising interest in urban ecology and in the ways animals adapt to novel and burgeoning urban environments [1]
Here we examine patterns of nest defense against humans by a synurbic raptor, the Black Kite Milvus migrans, which exploits humans for food in a megacity (Delhi, India) that incorporates a wide range of urban conditions, human densities and ritualized animal-feeding practices
The fact that defense intensity early in the season predicted eventual young production months later, by the end of breeding, implied three nonexclusive possibilities: (1) parents could estimate the eventual likelihood of breeding success early in the season and set their defense ; (2) aggressive nest defense lowered predation rates at the nest, with consequent benefits for young production; or (3) high quality individuals were simultaneously more aggressive and better breeders, generating a positive association between two parameters separated by months in time
Summary
Worldwide urbanization is raising interest in urban ecology and in the ways animals adapt to novel and burgeoning urban environments [1]. Behavioural mechanisms that mediate such adaptation remain an under-researched topic [2, 3], with current. Scholarship Trust and Somerville College (https:// www.some.ox.ac.uk: Discretionary Grant 2017). Funding for travelling and fieldwork by F. Sergio was afforded by Project CGL2015- 69445-P of the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness
Published Version (Free)
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have