Flocking the city: Avian demography and population dynamics in urban Latin America

We here provide a general overview of the study of bird abundance, demography, and populations in urban environments with special attention on those from Latin America. We found that studies focused on bird abundance and demography were more common in Argentina, Brazil, and Mexico. We classified tho...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Leveau, L.M., Zuria, I.
Formato: CHAP
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_97833196_v_n_p57_Leveau
Aporte de:
id todo:paper_97833196_v_n_p57_Leveau
record_format dspace
spelling todo:paper_97833196_v_n_p57_Leveau2023-10-03T16:45:02Z Flocking the city: Avian demography and population dynamics in urban Latin America Leveau, L.M. Zuria, I. Avian populations Breeding success Density Metapopulations Survival We here provide a general overview of the study of bird abundance, demography, and populations in urban environments with special attention on those from Latin America. We found that studies focused on bird abundance and demography were more common in Argentina, Brazil, and Mexico. We classified those species taken into account in four or more studies according to their response to urbanization. In general, specialist birds are negatively related with urbanization, whereas two invasive exotics, the Rock Pigeon (Columba livia) and House Sparrow (Passer domesticus), are present in most of the reviewed urbanized areas along Latin America. Although scarce, studies of bird demography revealed, in general, higher bird survival in urban environments, possibly due to lower predator density. However, anthropogenic causes have been identified to affect bird populations in urban areas (e.g., window and vehicle collisions, nest predation, predation by domestic cats and dogs). Future studies will importantly add to our knowledge of urban bird ecology in Latin America by continuing to quantify bird numbers and assess demography patterns, as well as identifying the factors that mold them. Birds, as highly informative and charismatic bioindicators, could play a crucial role in adding evidence-based knowledge for decision-makers to take action in building bird-friendly and livable cities. © Springer International Publishing AG 2017. CHAP info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_97833196_v_n_p57_Leveau
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Avian populations
Breeding success
Density
Metapopulations
Survival
spellingShingle Avian populations
Breeding success
Density
Metapopulations
Survival
Leveau, L.M.
Zuria, I.
Flocking the city: Avian demography and population dynamics in urban Latin America
topic_facet Avian populations
Breeding success
Density
Metapopulations
Survival
description We here provide a general overview of the study of bird abundance, demography, and populations in urban environments with special attention on those from Latin America. We found that studies focused on bird abundance and demography were more common in Argentina, Brazil, and Mexico. We classified those species taken into account in four or more studies according to their response to urbanization. In general, specialist birds are negatively related with urbanization, whereas two invasive exotics, the Rock Pigeon (Columba livia) and House Sparrow (Passer domesticus), are present in most of the reviewed urbanized areas along Latin America. Although scarce, studies of bird demography revealed, in general, higher bird survival in urban environments, possibly due to lower predator density. However, anthropogenic causes have been identified to affect bird populations in urban areas (e.g., window and vehicle collisions, nest predation, predation by domestic cats and dogs). Future studies will importantly add to our knowledge of urban bird ecology in Latin America by continuing to quantify bird numbers and assess demography patterns, as well as identifying the factors that mold them. Birds, as highly informative and charismatic bioindicators, could play a crucial role in adding evidence-based knowledge for decision-makers to take action in building bird-friendly and livable cities. © Springer International Publishing AG 2017.
format CHAP
author Leveau, L.M.
Zuria, I.
author_facet Leveau, L.M.
Zuria, I.
author_sort Leveau, L.M.
title Flocking the city: Avian demography and population dynamics in urban Latin America
title_short Flocking the city: Avian demography and population dynamics in urban Latin America
title_full Flocking the city: Avian demography and population dynamics in urban Latin America
title_fullStr Flocking the city: Avian demography and population dynamics in urban Latin America
title_full_unstemmed Flocking the city: Avian demography and population dynamics in urban Latin America
title_sort flocking the city: avian demography and population dynamics in urban latin america
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_97833196_v_n_p57_Leveau
work_keys_str_mv AT leveaulm flockingthecityaviandemographyandpopulationdynamicsinurbanlatinamerica
AT zuriai flockingthecityaviandemographyandpopulationdynamicsinurbanlatinamerica
_version_ 1782029707211964416