Abstract

The increasing urbanization of the landscape is a major component of global change worldwide. However, it is puzzling that wildlife is selecting anthropogenic habitats despite the availability of apparently high–quality semi–natural (i.e. less intensively modified) habitats. Definitive explanations for this process are still lacking. We have previously suggested that colonization of the urban habitat is initially triggered by ecological processes that take place outside urban areas as a consequence of past rural exodus. Here we present a diverse array of examples of selection of several types of anthropogenic habitat by wildlife in Spain (including transportation infrastructure, human–exclusion areas, urban areas under construction, cities, reservoirs, quarries and landfills) in support of this idea. Wildlife is moving out of its historical ecological refuges and losing fear of harmless urban humans. Mesopredators are rebounding by mesopredator release, due to ceased human persecution, and shrubs and trees are claiming former agricultural habitats. Together, these factors force many species to move to urbanized areas where they find open habitats, food associated with these habitats, and protection against predation. Hence, the classical balance of costs and benefits that takes place once inside urban areas, would actually be a second step of the process of colonization of urban areas. A better understanding of the initial triggers of urban colonization could help us increase the biological value of human–made habitats for wildlife in the future.

Highlights

  • One of the components of global change is the increasing urbanization of the landscape (Gil and Brumm, 2014; Murgui and Hedblom, 2017), with likely negative consequences for many animal species

  • An indirect proxy of this trend is the increasing number of papers devoted to the study of the use of anthropogenic habitats or human landscapes by wildlife during the last decade, compared to the general growth of the study of wildlife ecology

  • Attempts to explain the presence of wildlife in anthropogenic habitats have focused on analysing the main anatomical correlates of species living in urban areas, such as brain size (Sayol et al, 2020) or on analysing the balance between costs and benefits of urban life (Møller and Díaz, 2018a, 2018b)

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Summary

Introduction

One of the components of global change is the increasing urbanization of the landscape (Gil and Brumm, 2014; Murgui and Hedblom, 2017), with likely negative consequences for many animal species. We analyse here a diverse set of Iberian case studies of selection of anthropogenic habitats by wildlife with the aim of providing empirical support to the idea that colonization of anthropogenic landscapes is, in first instance, an ecological consequence of the human depopulation of the rural areas in the near past.

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