Department of Biogeography and Global Change (BGC-MNCN), Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales, CSIC, C/Serrano 115 bis, E-28006 Madrid, Spain.
Department of Biogeography and Global Change (BGC-MNCN), Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales, CSIC, C/Serrano 115 bis, E-28006 Madrid, Spain.
Sci Total Environ. 2022 Jun 25;827:154401. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.154401. Epub 2022 Mar 8.
Feral cat colonies in cities improve the wellbeing of people who feed and care for them, but they can have negative effects on biodiversity due to the predatory behaviour of cats. We analyse the effect of the presence of the 1171 colonies of feral cats reported for the city of Madrid (Spain) on the flight escape distances (FIDs) of birds to approaching human observers under standardized conditions. Location of cat colonies was obtained from maps maintained by the city authorities. The FID is a behavioural trait that integrates effects on bird's fearfulness of exposure to predation, disturbance, and physiological and reproductive needs. Shorter flight distances are associated with less exposure to predators and disturbance and better access to food and mates. Shorter FIDs are also associated to higher abundances and more positive population trends, at least in Spain. Mean FIDs of 694 birds of 34 species measured in nine city areas in the spring of 2021 were 10% longer in zones with colonies of feral cats than in neighbouring paired zones without colonies but similar regarding other factors potentially affecting FIDs (i.e. urban landscape structure). Birds were 33% higher above ground in zones with colonies, with no significant effects of perching higher on bird fleeing behaviour. Cat colonies were therefore increasing the fearfulness of individual birds and, presumably, downgraded their population trends. Compromising bird conservation with wellness effects of cat colonies on citizens at the city scale will thus imply the maintenance of colony-free areas, especially for ground-foraging birds. In addition, provision of perches for its use as temporal refuges around colonies might reconcile positive and negative effects at local scales.
城市中的流浪猫种群改善了喂养和照顾它们的人的幸福感,但由于猫的捕食行为,它们会对生物多样性产生负面影响。我们分析了马德里市(西班牙)报告的 1171 个流浪猫种群的存在对鸟类在标准化条件下接近人类观察者时的逃避飞行距离(FID)的影响。猫种群的位置是从城市当局维护的地图中获得的。FID 是一种行为特征,它综合了鸟类对捕食、干扰、生理和繁殖需求的恐惧程度的影响。较短的飞行距离与较少暴露于捕食者和干扰以及更好地获得食物和配偶有关。较短的 FID 也与更高的丰度和更积极的种群趋势有关,至少在西班牙是这样。2021 年春季在九个城市区域测量的 34 种 694 只鸟类的平均 FID 在有流浪猫种群的区域比在没有种群的相邻配对区域长 10%,但在其他可能影响 FID 的因素(即城市景观结构)方面相似。在有猫群的区域,鸟类离地面高出 33%,但在鸟类逃离行为中,栖息高度对鸟类没有显著影响。因此,猫群增加了个体鸟类的恐惧程度,并可能降低了它们的种群趋势。在城市范围内,用猫群对市民的福利影响来损害鸟类保护,这将意味着需要维持无种群区,特别是对于地面觅食的鸟类。此外,在猫群周围提供栖息处作为临时避难所,可能会在局部范围内协调积极和消极的影响。