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Articles

On the interplay between phylogeny and environment on behaviour of two urban bird species, Columba livia and Corvus corone (Aves)

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Pages 98-102 | Received 25 May 2015, Accepted 21 Oct 2015, Published online: 27 Nov 2015
 

Abstract

Different hypotheses exist to explain the ability of individuals or species to modify their behaviours in response to the urban environment. Our study addresses risk-taking in urban birds as an essential behavioural change in cities allowing the species to manage living in anthropic habitats. Specifically, we tested role of phylogeny and the environment on risk-taking, expressed in lower escape distances. We adopted a comparative approach and compared the flight distance of urban pigeons and urban crows in Paris with rural wild rock doves and crows in Sardinia, thus contrasting environmental conditions (urban or rural), species (columbids vs. corvids) and type (feral or wild). Pigeons had lower flight distance than crows in both rural and urban environments, and rural individuals of both species had higher flight distance than urban individuals. However, this intraspecific difference was higher in pigeons than in crows, and the interspecific difference was higher in urban than in rural areas. Our study shows that risk-taking in birds is the outcome of a complex interplay between several environmental and phylogenetic factors, and confirms the hypothesis of increased risk-taking in urban pigeons as a result of a pre-adaptation due to artificial selection, as often suggested but never scientifically demonstrated.

Acknowledgements

We are grateful to Lidia Fleba, Parco Naturale Regionale di Porto Conte, and to Massimo Scandura, University of Sassari, for the precious help given to Z. S. in Sardinia. We wish to thank three anonymous referees for helpful comments on an earlier draft of the manuscript.

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