Centre for Functional Biodiversity, School of Life Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Scottsville, P/Bag X01, Pietermaritzburg, 3209, South Africa.
Ambio. 2021 Oct;50(10):1866-1878. doi: 10.1007/s13280-021-01501-5. Epub 2021 Mar 7.
Urbanisation is rapidly transforming natural landscapes with consequences for biodiversity. Little is documented on the response of African wildlife to urbanisation. We reviewed case studies of vertebrate species' responses to urbanisation in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa to determine trends. Connected habitat mosaics of natural and anthropogenic green spaces are critical for urban wildlife persistence. We present a novel modification to the final of three phases of the framework described by Evans et al. (2010), which documents this sequence for vertebrate species persistence, based on the perspective of our research. Species in suburbia exhibit an initial phase where behavioural and ecological flexibility, life-history traits and phenotypic plasticity either contribute to their success, or they stay at low numbers. Where successful, the next phase is a rapid increase in populations and distribution; anthropogenic food resources and alternate breeding sites are effectively exploited. The modified third phase either continues to spread, plateau or decline.
城市化正在迅速改变自然景观,对生物多样性产生影响。关于非洲野生动物对城市化的反应,记录的资料很少。我们审查了南非夸祖鲁-纳塔尔省脊椎动物物种对城市化反应的案例研究,以确定趋势。连接的自然和人为绿地生境镶嵌体对城市野生动物的生存至关重要。我们对 Evans 等人(2010 年)描述的框架的最后三个阶段中的最后一个阶段进行了新颖的修改。基于我们的研究观点,该框架记录了脊椎动物物种生存的这一序列。在郊区的物种表现出初始阶段,其行为和生态灵活性、生活史特征和表型可塑性要么有助于其成功,要么保持在低数量。如果成功,下一阶段是种群和分布的快速增加;人为的食物资源和替代繁殖地被有效地利用。修改后的第三阶段要么继续扩散,要么稳定,要么下降。