Urban Bird Community Assembly Mechanisms and Driving Factors in University Campuses in Nanjing, China.

Animals (Basel)

Co-Innovation Center for Sustainable Forestry in Southern China, College of Biology and the Environment, Nanjing Forestry University, Nanjing 210037, China.

Published: February 2023


Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

University campuses are important components of cities, harboring the majority of urban biodiversity. In this study, based on monthly bird survey data covering 12 university campuses located either downtown or in the newly developed areas in Nanjing, China, in 2019, we studied the assembly processes of each campus's bird population and their main drivers by modeling a set of ecological and landscape determinants. Our results showed that (1) bird abundance and species diversity in the newly developed areas were significantly higher than in those downtown; (2) the phylogeny of bird communities in all universities followed a pattern of aggregation, indicating that environmental filtering played a major role in community assembly; (3) specifically, grass, water, and buildings were the main factors affecting each campus's bird community's functional and phylogenetic diversity, with the areas of grass and water habitats having a significant positive correlation with phylogenetic diversity, while the size of building areas was negatively correlated. Our results emphasize that habitat features play a decisive role in determining urban bird population diversity and community assembly processes. We suggest that increasing landscape diversity, e.g., by reasonably arranging the location and area of water bodies and grasslands and improving the landscape connectivity, could be a powerful way to maintain and promote urban bird diversity.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9952131PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani13040673DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

urban bird
12
community assembly
12
university campuses
12
nanjing china
8
newly developed
8
developed areas
8
assembly processes
8
campus's bird
8
bird population
8
grass water
8

Similar Publications

Animals communicate information primarily via their calls, and directly using their vocalizations proves essential for executing species conservation and tracking biodiversity. Conventional visual approaches are frequently limited by distance and surroundings, while call-based monitoring concentrates solely on the animals themselves, proving more effective and straightforward than visual techniques. This paper introduces an animal sound classification model named SeqFusionNet, integrating the sequential encoding of Transformer with the global perception of MLP to achieve robust global feature extraction.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

How urban green space typologies and attributes influence avifauna in rapidly urbanizing Afrotropical cities.

J Environ Manage

September 2025

A.P. Leventis Ornithological Research Institute (APLORI), Centre of Excellence, University of Jos Biological Conservatory, P.O.Box 13404, Laminga, Jos, 930001, Plateau State, Nigeria. Electronic address:

Urban green spaces serve as critical refugia for bird conservation in an increasingly urbanized world. To understand how these spaces support avian communities in Afrotropical cities, we investigated bird assemblages across 40 urban green spaces in Jos-Plateau and Abuja-FCT in central Nigeria, covering a total of 91 transects (45.5 km), to examine how green space typologies and attributes influence avian biodiversity.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A first instance of parental care by a male-plumaged hummingbird from a sexually dimorphic species contributes important natural history understanding and helps illuminate the possibility of interesting female-limited polymorphisms across hummingbird species. Using photos and 2.5 min of video taken at close proximity, we documented a Veraguan mango () with male plumage both incubating eggs and later feeding nestlings in the town of Palmar Norte in southern Costa Rica.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Mosquito-borne diseases are deeply embedded within ecological communities, with environmental changes-particularly climate change-shaping their dynamics. Increasingly intense droughts across the globe have profound implications for the transmission of these diseases, as drought conditions can alter mosquito breeding habitats, host-seeking behaviours and mosquito-host contact rates. To quantify the effect of drought on disease transmission, we use West Nile virus as a model system and leverage a robust mosquito and virus dataset consisting of over 500 000 trap nights collected from 2010 to 2023, spanning a historic drought period followed by atmospheric rivers.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Usutu virus, a neurotropic Orthoflavivirus transmitted by mosquitoes, was first identified in South Africa in 1959 and has progressively spread across Europe over the past two decades. This virus follows an enzootic cycle between mosquitoes and birds, leading to periodic outbreaks that have caused significant bird mortality. Although primarily an avian pathogen, Usutu virus can occasionally infect humans and other mammals who act as incidental or dead-end hosts.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF