Chow Pizza Ka Yee, Uchida Kenta, von Bayern Auguste M P, Koizumi Itsuro
Max Planck Institute for Ornithology, Eberhard-Gwinner-Strasse, 82319 Starnberg, Germany.
Division of Biosphere Science, Faculty of Environmental Earth Science, Hokkaido University, N10W5 Sapporo, Hokkaido 060-0810, Japan.
Proc Biol Sci. 2021 Mar 31;288(1947):20202832. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2020.2832.
Urban environments can be deemed 'harsh' for some wildlife species, but individuals frequently show behavioural flexibility to cope with challenges and demands posed by life in the city. For example, urban animals often show better performance in solving novel problems than rural conspecifics, which helps when using novel resources under human-modified environments. However, which characteristics of urban environments fine-tune novel problem-solving performance, and their relative importance, remain unclear. Here, we examined how four urban environmental characteristics (direct human disturbance, indirect human disturbance, size of green coverage and squirrel population size) may potentially influence novel problem-solving performance of a successful 'urban dweller', the Eurasian red squirrel, by presenting them with a novel food-extraction problem. We found that increased direct human disturbance, indirect human disturbance and a higher squirrel population size decreased the proportion of solving success at the population level. At the individual level, an increase in squirrel population size decreased the latency to successfully solve the novel problem the first time. More importantly, increased direct human disturbance, squirrel population size and experience with the novel problem decreased problem-solving time over time. These findings highlight that some urban environmental characteristics shape two phenotypic extremes in the behaviour-flexibility spectrum: individuals either demonstrated enhanced learning or they failed to solve the novel problem.
城市环境对一些野生动物来说可能被认为是“恶劣的”,但个体经常表现出行为灵活性,以应对城市生活带来的挑战和需求。例如,城市动物在解决新问题方面往往比农村的同类表现更好,这在人类改造的环境中利用新资源时很有帮助。然而,城市环境的哪些特征会微调新问题解决能力,以及它们的相对重要性,仍不清楚。在这里,我们通过向欧亚红松鼠(一种成功的“城市居民”)提出一个新的食物获取问题,研究了四种城市环境特征(直接人类干扰、间接人类干扰、绿地覆盖面积和松鼠种群规模)可能如何潜在地影响其新问题解决能力。我们发现,在种群水平上,直接人类干扰、间接人类干扰的增加以及松鼠种群规模的增大,降低了成功解决问题的比例。在个体水平上,松鼠种群规模的增加缩短了首次成功解决新问题的潜伏期。更重要的是,随着时间的推移,直接人类干扰、松鼠种群规模的增加以及对新问题的经验积累减少了问题解决时间。这些发现突出表明,一些城市环境特征塑造了行为灵活性谱中的两个表型极端:个体要么表现出更强的学习能力,要么无法解决新问题。