Eumelanin-based colouration reflects local survival of juvenile feral pigeons in an urban pigeon house
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Serval ID
serval:BIB_C109D0EB6802
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Eumelanin-based colouration reflects local survival of juvenile feral pigeons in an urban pigeon house
Journal
Journal of Avian Biology
ISSN
0908-8857
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2013
Volume
44
Number
6
Pages
583-590
Language
english
Abstract
Urbanisation introduces deep changes in habitats, eventually creating new urban ecosystems where ecological functions are driven by human activities. The higher frequency of some phenotypes in urban vs rural/wild areas has led to the assumption that directional selection in urban habitats occurs, which may thereby favour some behavioural and physiological traits in urban animal populations compared to rural ones. However, empirical evidence of directional selection on phenotypic traits in urban areas remains scarce. In this study we tested whether eumelanin-based colouration could be linked to survival in two urban populations of the feral pigeon Columba livia. A number of studies in different cities pointed out a higher frequency of darker individuals in more urbanised areas compared to rural ones. To investigate whether directional selection through survival on this highly heritable trait could explain such patterns, we conducted mark-recapture studies on two populations of feral pigeons in highly urbanized areas. We predicted that darker coloured individuals would exhibit higher survival and/or philopatry (integrated into local survival') than paler coloured ones. No difference in local survival was found between adults of different colouration intensities. However, on one site, we found that darker juveniles had a higher local survival probability than light ones. Juvenile local survival on that site was also negatively correlated with the number of chicks born. This suggests the existence of colour- and/or density-dependent selection processes acting on juvenile feral pigeons in urban environments, acting through differential mortality and/or dispersal.
Web of science
Create date
12/12/2013 11:10
Last modification date
21/08/2019 5:17