Abstract

Urban areas attract birds during the winter when cities provide a predictable source of food and relatively stable weather conditions. However, many other factors determine the occurrence of birds in cities. This study analysed the relationship between corvids wintering in the city of Poznań, in western Poland and habitat features. Each of 32 research site was investigated three times. The most abundant species was the rook (mean = 17.4 individuals/site); the most frequent was the Eurasian magpie (88% of all sites). To determine variables that influence the abundance of birds, a set of generalised linear models was created, with model averaging being selected for each species. The abundance of hooded crows was positively influenced by surface of parks, water and by the length of tram tracks. The number of rooks was positively linked with the number of walnut trees, garbage cans and the surface of the water and negatively linked with the length of watercourses. Jackdaw was affected positively by the number of garbage cans, the surface of the water and negatively by the cover of trees. The number of magpies was associated with the number of walnut trees, garbage cans and negatively influenced by the surface of trees. None of the investigated habitat variables significantly affected the abundance of European jay. We also found a positive correlation between the abundances of hooded crow, rook, jackdaw and magpie. The results indicate that corvids wintering in urban ecosystems exhibit selectivity toward specific habitat features and that preferences differ among the studied species.

Highlights

  • Urbanisation is proceeding at an ever-growing rate, an increasing part of the globe surface is occupied by human settlements with 55% of the world’s human population living in town and cities nowadays (United Nations 2018)

  • The analysis revealed that each investigated species showed selectivity for a different set of habitat features (Table 3)

  • The number of rooks was positively linked with the number of walnut trees (p < 0.001), the number of garbage cans (p < 0.001) and the surface of the water (p < 0.01) and negatively linked with the length of watercourses (p < 0.05, Fig. 3)

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Summary

Introduction

Urbanisation is proceeding at an ever-growing rate, an increasing part of the globe surface is occupied by human settlements with 55% of the world’s human population living in town and cities nowadays (United Nations 2018). Such transformed areas create an entirely new environment, which animals need to either adapt to or abandon (Angold et al 2006; Nielsen et al 2014; McKinney 2008; Møller 2009). Due to variation in the vegetation composition and landscape structure and management, urban habitats may have a various

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