Litcius/Paper detail

Urban tree diversity fosters bird insectivory despite a loss in bird diversity with urbanization

Laura Schillé, Alain Paquette, Gabriel Marcotte, Hugo Ouellet, Swane Cobus, Luc Barbaro, Bastien Castagneyrol

2024Landscape and Urban Planning19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

• Urbanization reduces insectivorous bird specific richness and functional diversity. • Tree diversity within city increases bird insectivory. • Modeling intra-urban heterogeneity is essential to understand trophic interactions. Urbanization is one of the main drivers of biotic homogenization in bird communities worldwide. Yet, only a few studies have addressed its functional consequences on the top-down control birds exert on insect herbivores. We hypothesized that their inconsistent results reflect the overlooked heterogeneity of the urban habitat for birds, and in particular the distribution and diversity of urban trees. We monitored tree diversity, bird diversity, avian predation attempts on artificial prey, and the effect of bird exclusion on insect herbivory in 97 trees distributed among 24 urban experimental plots in the city of Montreal, Canada. We characterized urbanization levels through a combination of variables related to tree density, impervious surfaces, anthropic noise, and human population density. Bird diversity decreased with increasing urbanization, whereas the frequency of generalist synurbic species increased. We found no significant relationship between predation and urbanization or between predation and bird diversity. However, tree diversity was positively correlated with predation attempts on artificial prey, irrespective of bird diversity. We revealed a mismatch between the effects of urbanization on bird diversity and on the regulation service and unraveled the functional importance of tree diversity in shaping the avian predation function in urban ecosystems. Our study advocates for the consideration of intra-urban heterogeneity in the investigation of trophic cascades within cities.

Topics & Concepts

Diversity (politics)UrbanizationGeographyEcologyBiologySociologyAnthropologyEcology and Vegetation Dynamics StudiesLand Use and Ecosystem ServicesPlant and animal studies