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Research Article | Open Access

A highly effective incubation strategy enhanced the urban bird hatch success

Long Maa,cYuancheng LiubWenjing LuaZheng ZhangaWanyou LiaZiwei ZhangaXueli Zhanga,dChaoying ZhuaJunpeng BaiaZhifeng XuaYuqing HanaLuzhang Ruana,e( )
School of Life Sciences, Nanchang University, Nanchang, 330031, China
Faculty of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, McGill University, QC, Canada
Jinhui Liquor Company Limited, Longnan, 742300, China
Guangdong Maoming Health Vocational College, Maoming, 525000, China
Jiangxi Province Key Laboratory of Watershed Ecosystem Change and Biodiversity, Center for Watershed Ecology, Institute of Life Science and School of Life Sciences, Nanchang University, Nanchang, 330031, China
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Abstract

Urbanization is currently considered one of the most rapid types of global environmental change. Urban habitats are biotically and abiotically different from their rural areas, i.e., the ambient temperature, predator, and food availability. These novel challenges create new selection pressures, which allow one to investigate eco-evolutionary responses to contemporary environmental change. A total of 118 breeding nests were monitored for nest predation in both urban and rural areas from 2018 to 2020. We used environmental factors from urban and rural areas and behavioral data from 439 Chinese Blackbird (Turdus mandarinus) valid incubation days to understand the impact of urbanization on the incubation behavior of blackbirds and its adaptation mechanism to the urban environment. Cities have warmer ambient temperatures and lower predation pressures than rural areas. Urban blackbirds chose the incubation strategy with shorter and more bouts, while rural blackbirds selected the incubation strategy with longer and fewer bouts. The plasticity of incubation behavior of urban blackbirds was higher than that of rural areas, and the range of egg temperature was also higher than that of rural areas. In addition, incubation temperature and the number of bouts per day were the key factors affecting the day survival rate of blackbirds, and the hatching rate of urban blackbirds was higher than that of rural blackbirds. Our results provide evidence for behavioral shifts in blackbirds during adaptation to urbanization and support the central role of behavioral adaptation in the successful colonization of new environments by wildlife. These help us understand the behavioral characteristics required for wildlife to live in cities and the urban adaptors faced environmental pressures.

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Avian Research
Article number: 100074
Cite this article:
Ma L, Liu Y, Lu W, et al. A highly effective incubation strategy enhanced the urban bird hatch success. Avian Research, 2023, 14(1): 100074. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.avrs.2022.100074

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Received: 21 June 2022
Revised: 24 November 2022
Accepted: 10 December 2022
Published: 17 January 2023
© 2023 The Authors.

This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

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