Urbanization is associated with increased breeding rate, but decreased breeding success, in an urban population of near-threatened African Crowned Eagles

IF 2.6 2区 生物学 Q1 ORNITHOLOGY
Condor Pub Date : 2020-05-20 DOI:10.1093/condor/duaa024
Rebecca Muller, A. Amar, P. Sumasgutner, Shane C. McPherson, C. Downs
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引用次数: 10

Abstract

ABSTRACT Urban areas can be attractive to certain species because of increased food abundance and nesting availability, which in turn may increase productivity or breeding rates. However, there are also potential costs associated with urban living such as higher nest failure, poorer body condition, or increased prevalence of disease. These costs may result in species trading off the number of young produced against the condition of their young. African Crowned Eagles (Stephanoaetus coronatus) are a rare example of large, powerful apex predators that breed in some urban areas in Africa. In this study, we explored the breeding performance of these eagles across an urbanization gradient in KwaZulu-Natal Province, South Africa, over 7 breeding seasons. We predicted that living in an urban environment would increase productivity through an increase in breeding rate (shifting from typically biennial breeding to annual breeding). We then explored if there were any hidden costs associated with such a change in breeding strategy by examining the body condition of chicks from pairs that had successfully bred in the previous year. We found that pairs in more urban areas were more likely to breed annually, resulting in higher breeding rates, but were also less likely to successfully fledge a chick (i.e. lower breeding success). These 2 contrasting responses counteracted each other and resulted in similar productivity across the urbanization gradient. For those eagles that bred in consecutive years, annual breeding did not appear to have a negative cost on chick condition. The switch to annual breeding is thought to be a response to improved or more constant food sources in urban areas, while higher failure rates might be because of increased nest disturbances from anthropogenic sources (e.g., vegetation clearing, development of industrial areas, human and car traffic). However, although urbanization negatively affected the breeding success of African Crowned Eagles, they are able to persist and thrive in this highly transformed environment, likely through an increased breeding rate. LAY SUMMARY One species that is hardly recognized as an urban adapter is the Crowned Eagle in the metropoles of Durban and Pietermaritzburg, South Africa. We explored the breeding performance of Crowned Eagles across different levels of urbanization, and specifically teased apart breeding rate (i.e. if an eagle breeds annually or every other year) and breeding success (i.e. if they fledge a young or not in a given year). We showed that Crowned Eagles change their breeding strategy in urban areas by increasing their breeding rate, but found nest failures occurred more often at more urbanized sites. These contrasting responses counteracted each other and resulted in similar productivity across the urbanization gradient and highlighted the value of long-term data.
城市化与繁殖率的增加有关,但在城市人口中,繁殖成功率却降低了
城市地区可能对某些物种具有吸引力,因为城市地区的食物丰富度和筑巢机会增加,这反过来又可能提高生产力或繁殖率。然而,城市生活也有潜在的成本,如更高的巢衰竭,更差的身体状况,或疾病的患病率增加。这些代价可能导致物种在产仔数量和幼崽的生存条件之间进行权衡。非洲冠鹰(Stephanoaetus coronatus)是一种罕见的大型,强大的顶级掠食者,在非洲的一些城市地区繁殖。在这项研究中,我们探讨了这些鹰在南非夸祖鲁-纳塔尔省跨越城市化梯度的7个繁殖季节的繁殖表现。我们预测,生活在城市环境中会通过增加繁殖率(从典型的两年一次繁殖转变为一年一次繁殖)来提高生产力。然后,我们通过检查前一年成功繁殖的雏鸟的身体状况,探索是否有任何与这种繁殖策略变化相关的隐性成本。我们发现,在更多的城市地区,配对更有可能每年繁殖一次,从而导致更高的繁殖率,但也不太可能成功孵出一只小鸡(即较低的繁殖成功率)。这两种截然不同的反应相互抵消,导致整个城市化梯度的生产率相似。对于那些连续几年繁殖的鹰来说,每年繁殖一次对雏鸟状况似乎没有负成本。向每年繁殖的转变被认为是对城市地区食物来源改善或更稳定的反应,而更高的失败率可能是由于人为来源(例如,植被清除、工业区的发展、人类和汽车交通)对巢穴的干扰增加。然而,尽管城市化对非洲冠鹰的繁殖成功产生了负面影响,但它们能够在这种高度变化的环境中生存并茁壮成长,这可能是通过提高繁殖率实现的。在南非德班和彼得马里茨堡的大都市中,有一种几乎不被认为是城市适应者的冠鹰。我们探索了不同城市化水平下冠鹰的繁殖表现,并特别梳理了繁殖率(即鹰是否每年繁殖一次或每隔一年繁殖一次)和繁殖成功率(即它们是否在某一年羽化幼雏)。我们发现,在城市地区,冠鹰通过增加繁殖率来改变它们的繁殖策略,但在城市化程度越高的地区,巢失败发生的频率越高。这些截然不同的响应相互抵消,导致整个城市化梯度的生产率相似,并突出了长期数据的价值。
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来源期刊
Condor
Condor ORNITHOLOGY-
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
12.50%
发文量
46
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Condor is the official publication of the Cooper Ornithological Society, a non-profit organization of over 2,000 professional and amateur ornithologists and one of the largest ornithological societies in the world. A quarterly international journal that publishes original research from all fields of avian biology, The Condor has been a highly respected forum in ornithology for more than 100 years. The journal is one of the top ranked ornithology publications. Types of paper published include feature articles (longer manuscripts) Short Communications (generally shorter papers or papers that deal with one primary finding), Commentaries (brief papers that comment on articles published previously in The Condor), and Book Reviews.
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