Urbanisation Flashcards

1
Q

The rise in urban ecology

A

Several times more studies published in the last decade than in the last 100 years

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2
Q

Why is urbanisation important?

A

Increasing extent as over 50% of human populations will live in a city in the upcoming decades

Urbanisation is increasingly intense, “hard surface” more prominent, lower biodiversity in loss of gardens and infilling of waste ground

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3
Q

Current extent of urban areas

A

10% in some regions but >1% in some regions

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4
Q

245 globally threatened birds in Africa

A

15% due to residential and commercial development

17% due to pollution, light pollution, urban waste water

20% due to human disturbance, recreational activities

16% due to transport and service corridors, shipping lanes, roads and railroads

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5
Q

1995: 29 of 867 ecoregions are >33% urban

A

these contain 213 endemic vertebrates

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6
Q

Urbanisation often develops in areas of high wildlife importance

A

Causes of threatened/endangered listings in the US are non-native species and urbanisation

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7
Q

Urban expansion by 2030

A

300% increase

900% increase in some biodiversity hotspots with little current urbanisation (Turkey, Eastern Afromontane, Guinean forests of West Africa)

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8
Q

Increasing extent of urban pressures surrounding natural areas

A

Protected areas will be much closer to urbanised areas

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9
Q

Difference between rural and urban areas

A

Urban heat island, 3°C warmer in cities

Pollution

Disturbance

Biotic interactions

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10
Q

Individual species abundance depends on elasticity of the species to adapt

A
Urban avoider (specialists) will decline
Urban adapter will do best at medium intensity urbanisation
Urban exploiter (generalists) will increase
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11
Q

Urbanisation promotes

A

biotic homogenisation (regardless of their location urban assemblages will be similar)

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12
Q

Assemblage structure and species richness

A

declines, but with increasing proportions of exotic species colonising new areas

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13
Q

Population genetic structure

A

Genetic diversity decreases in urban populations with fewer polymorphic loci, allelic richness, and haplotypes

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14
Q

Experiment on Crepis sancta flower

A

55% of seeds dispersed land on concrete and can’t germinate (0% in rural areas)
Evidence suggest short-term evolution (5-12 generations) changes species behaviour in Crepis

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15
Q

Trait divergence in urban birds

A

Dong is higher dB in urban areas and of higher frequency. Unsure whether adaptive or not, or how it influences mate choice.

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16
Q

Trait divergence in plant reproduction

A

Herkogamy in rural Centaurium erythraea where male anthers and female stigma are spatially isolated

No herkogamy in urban species adapted to dearth of pollinators, heritability 0.62

When rural adapted plants are put in urban environments then they have lower seed sets per fruit. Maladapted.

17
Q

Bird feeders

A

Controversial whether it increases population densities
May promote aggressive invasive or predatory species
Human-nature interactions

18
Q

Cat wars

A

cats probably limit bird population size in some locations

This indirectly, through fear of predation, reduces provisioning and leads to reduced chick growth rates and smaller clutch size.

On average cats reduced provisioning rates by one third.

19
Q

Trait mediated indirect effects

A

increased mobbing could increase risk of predators finding a nest

20
Q

The pigeon paradox

A

conservation may increasingly depend on the ability of people in cities to maintain a connection with nature

21
Q

97% above ground carbon stored in trees

No difference between public & private sites

A

Low in domestic gardens = herbacous vegetation
10% council grassland planted with trees 28,400 more tonnes carbon
10% gardens contain 1 more tree 927 more tonnes carbon

22
Q

Direct effect of trees

A

Shades hard surfaces reduces radiant heat gain

Adds moisture increasing the air’s specific heat capacity

Evapo-transpiration

Shading cools buildings

Flood regulation through transpiration, and infiltration into ground

23
Q

Impacts of future urbanisation

A

Loss in carbon storage and agricultural production 3.5 times higher under the sprawl than the densification scenario

24
Q

Summary

A

Urbanisation impacts:
1. Assemblage composition and structure:
large scale - extinction threat, urban avoiders
small scale - richness peaks at moderate intensities of urban
development
2. Traits of individual species:
communication, reproduction, behaviour etc. plasticity vs genetic adaptation
3. Urbanisation typically reduces ecosystem service provision:
With (often different) consequences for urban sprawl versus densification debate