宗教、政治和战争对城市进化生物学的遗留影响

Elizabeth J. Carlen, Aude E. Caizergues, Zuzanna Jagiello, Hanna Kuzyo, Jason Munshi-South, Marina Alberti, Fabio Angeoletto, Santiago Bonilla-Bedoya, Warren Booth, Anne Charmantier, Jennifer M. Cocciardi, Elizabeth M. Cook, Kiyoko M. Gotanda, Lynn Govaert, Lauren E. Johnson, Daijiang Li, Anna N. Malesis, Ella Martin, John M. Marzluff, Małgorzata Mazurek, Lindsay S. Miles, Megan Phifer-Rixey, David Salazar-Valenzuela, Amy Savage, Rebecca Snyder, Ignacy Stadnicki, Yuriy Vergeles, Brian C. Verrelli, Daniel A. Villar, Matthew Wilhelm-Solomon, Meredith Willmott, Kristin M. Winchell, Shannan S. Yates, Yuyu Zhou, Colin J. Garroway, Marta Szulkin
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引用次数: 0

摘要

城市化是过去四个世纪的一个显著特征,全球大多数人口现在生活在与野生动物共享的高度改变的环境中。传统上,城市生物进化研究侧重于生境破碎化、污染和资源可用性等物理因素,往往忽视了塑造城市环境的社会和政治力量。本综述探讨了宗教、政治和战争如何通过塑造环境条件和选择压力来推动城市野生动物的进化。我们综合了这些影响的现有知识,并提出了可检验的假设,以推动该领域的发展。了解这些动态对于解释城市演化过程的变异性和预测城市系统的未来发展至关重要。通过整合社会和政治维度,我们可以更深入地了解城市如何塑造居住在其中的生物的进化。城市影响生物进化,但传统上研究人员关注的是城市环境的生物物理影响。相反,这篇评论探讨了宗教、政治和战争的社会进程如何通过塑造城市条件来推动野生动物的进化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Legacy effects of religion, politics and war on urban evolutionary biology

Legacy effects of religion, politics and war on urban evolutionary biology
Urbanization has been a defining feature of the past four centuries, with most of the global population now living in highly modified environments shared with wildlife. Traditionally, biological urban evolutionary research has focused on physical factors such as habitat fragmentation, pollution and resource availability, often overlooking the social and political forces shaping urban environments. This Review explores how religion, politics and war drive urban wildlife evolution by shaping environmental conditions and selective pressures. We synthesize existing knowledge on these influences and propose testable hypotheses to advance the field. Understanding these dynamics is essential for explaining the variability in urban evolutionary processes and predicting the future development of urban systems. By integrating social and political dimensions, we can gain deeper insights into how cities shape the evolution of organisms that inhabit them. Cities affect biological evolution, but traditionally researchers focus on the biophysical influence of urban environments. Instead, this Review explores how the social processes of religion, politics and war drive wildlife evolution by shaping urban conditions.
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