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Latitudinal gradients in seed predation persist in urbanized environments

  • Anna L. Hargreaves*
  • , John Ensing
  • , Olivia Rahn
  • , Fernanda M.P. Oliveira
  • , Jérôme Burkiewicz
  • , Joëlle Lafond
  • , Sybille Haeussler
  • , M. Brooke Byerley-Best
  • , Kira Lazda
  • , Heather L. Slinn
  • , Ella Martin
  • , Matthew L. Carlson
  • , Todd L. Sformo
  • , Emma Dawson-Glass
  • , Mariana C. Chiuffo
  • , Yalma L. Vargas-Rodriguez
  • , Carlos I. García-Jiménez
  • , Inácio J.M.T. Gomes
  • , Sandra Klemet-N’Guessan
  • , Lucas Paolucci
  • Simon Joly, Klaus Mehltreter, Jenny Muñoz, Carmela Buono, Jedediah F. Brodie, Antonio Rodriguez-Campbell, Thor Veen, Benjamin G. Freeman, Julie A. Lee-Yaw, Juan Camilo Muñoz, Alexandra Paquette, Jennifer Butler, Esteban Suaréz
*Autor correspondiente de este trabajo
  • McGill University
  • Okanagan College
  • Universidade de Pernambuco
  • University of Montreal
  • University of Northern British Columbia
  • Botanical Research Institute of Texas
  • University of Guelph
  • Vive Crop Protection
  • University of Toronto
  • University of Alaska Anchorage
  • University of Alaska Fairbanks
  • Universidad Nacional del Comahue -CONICET
  • Universidad de Guadalajara
  • Universidade Federal de Viçosa
  • Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais
  • Trent University
  • Montreal Botanical Garden
  • Instituto de Ecologia, A.C.
  • University of British Columbia
  • Decker School of Nursing
  • University of Montana
  • Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
  • Quest University Canada
  • Georgia Institute of Technology
  • University of Lethbridge
  • University of Ottawa
  • Fundación Humedales
  • INSTITUTE FOR APPLIED ECOLOGY

Producción científica: Contribución a una revistaArtículorevisión exhaustiva

11 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

Urbanization is creating a new global biome, in which cities and suburbs around the world often resemble each other more than the local natural areas they replaced. But while urbanization can profoundly affect ecology at local scales, we know little about whether it disrupts large-scale ecological patterns. Here we test whether urbanization disrupts a macroecological pattern central to ecological and evolutionary theory: the increase in seed predation intensity from high to low latitudes. Across 14,000 km of latitude spanning the Americas, we compared predation intensity on two species of standardized experimental seeds in urbanized and natural areas. In natural areas, predation on both seed species increased fivefold from high latitudes to the tropics, one of the strongest latitudinal gradients in species interactions documented so far. Surprisingly, latitudinal gradients in predation were equally strong in urbanized areas despite significant habitat modification. Nevertheless, urbanization did affect seed predation. Compared with natural areas, urbanization reduced overall predation and vertebrate predation, did not affect predation by invertebrates in general, and increased predation by ants. Our results show that macroecological patterns in predation intensity can persist in urbanized environments, even as urbanization alters the relative importance of predators and potentially the evolutionary trajectory of urban populations.

Idioma originalInglés
Páginas (desde-hasta)1897-1906
Número de páginas10
PublicaciónNature Ecology and Evolution
Volumen8
N.º10
DOI
EstadoPublicada - oct. 2024

ODS de las Naciones Unidas

Este resultado contribuye a los siguientes Objetivos de Desarrollo Sostenible

  1. ODS 11: Ciudades y comunidades sostenibles
    ODS 11: Ciudades y comunidades sostenibles

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