Different traits shape winners and losers in urban bird assemblages across seasons
Riccardo Alba, Fabio Marcolin, Giacomo Assandri, Luca Ilahiane, Francesca Cochis, Mattia Brambilla, Diego Rubolini & Dan Chamberlain
Abstract
Urbanisation is a major driver of global biodiversity decline, profoundly affecting animal communities. While most studies on bird communities have primarily focused on the breeding season, we aimed to identify species responses and their associated traits by adopting a stratified design and using a multi-season approach considering a gradient from highly urbanised city centres to the urban–rural fringe across six Italian cities. We found that bird assemblages exhibited different responses to urbanisation according to season. Winners (i.e. species positively affected by urbanisation) were characterised by traits such as colonial nesting, high productivity and longevity. In winter, these species displayed generalist foraging strategies and solitary behaviour. Losers (i.e. species negatively affected by urbanisation) tended to be insectivorous, ground-nesting and short-distance migratory species. Interestingly, intra-specific variations emerged, with wintering populations of some species exploiting highly urbanised areas despite not breeding there. Urban adapters, although not strictly winners, displayed resilience by navigating a range of urban conditions, effectively exploiting intermediate levels of urbanisation. This study provides novel insights into the complex ecological dynamics occurring within the urban matrix in different seasons. Our findings emphasise the importance of adopting a multi-season approach in research and urban planning to better understand species responses and develop more effective, sustainable strategies for biodiversity conservation in urban environments.
Read the study
If you’re an author on this paper or just found it really interesting, consider writing a post telling us more about it! Contact Kristin for more details and to become a contributor.
Featured photo: © Edoardo Nardelli, some rights reserved (CC-BY)
- New Lit Alert: Interpopulation morphological differences and sexual dimorphism of Dekay’s brownsnake (Storeria dekayi) along a rural–urban gradient - July 2, 2025
- New Lit Alert: Sex-specific morphological shifts across space and time in replicate urban wall lizard introductions - June 25, 2025
- New Lit Alert: Parallel phenotypes of Littoraria angulifera emerge across ecoregions, as a response to urbanization - June 18, 2025
Leave a Reply