Fanelli Rachel E, Martin Paul R, Robinson Orin J, Bonier Frances
Department of Biology, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.
Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, USA.
Ecology. 2022 Dec;103(12):e3821. doi: 10.1002/ecy.3821. Epub 2022 Aug 23.
Species vary in their responses to urban habitat; most species avoid these environments, whereas others tolerate or even thrive in them. To better characterize the extent to which species vary in their responses to urban habitat (from this point forwards "urban tolerance"), we used several methods to quantify these responses at a continental scale across all birds. Using open access community science-derived data from the eBird Status and Trends Products and two different types of high-resolution geospatial data that quantify urbanization of landscapes, we calculated urban tolerance for 432 species with breeding ranges that overlap large cities in Canada or the USA. We developed six different calculations to characterize species-level urban tolerance, allowing us to assess how each species' relative abundance across their breeding range varied with estimates of urban habitat use and intensity. We assessed correlations among these six indices, then compressed the two best-performing indices into a single principal component (multivariate urban tolerance index) that captured variation in urban tolerance among species. We assessed the accuracy of our single and multivariate urban tolerance indices using 24 test species that have been well characterized for their tolerance or avoidance of the urban habitat, as well as with previously published, independent urban tolerance estimates. Here, we provide this new dataset of species-level urban tolerance estimates that improves upon previous metrics by incorporating continental-scale, continuous estimates that better differentiate species' tolerance of urban habitat compared with existing, categorical methods. These refined metrics can be used to test hypotheses that link ecological, life history, and behavioral traits to avian urban tolerance. The dataset is licensed as CC-By Attribution 4.0 International. Users must appropriately cite the data paper and dataset if used in publications and scientific presentations.
不同物种对城市栖息地的反应各不相同;大多数物种避开这些环境,而其他一些物种则能容忍甚至在其中繁衍生息。为了更好地描述物种对城市栖息地的反应差异程度(从现在起称为“城市耐受性”),我们使用了几种方法在大陆尺度上对所有鸟类的这些反应进行量化。利用来自eBird状态与趋势产品的开放获取社区科学数据以及两种不同类型的高分辨率地理空间数据(用于量化景观的城市化程度),我们计算了432种繁殖范围与加拿大或美国大城市重叠的物种的城市耐受性。我们开发了六种不同的计算方法来描述物种水平的城市耐受性,使我们能够评估每个物种在其繁殖范围内的相对丰度如何随城市栖息地利用和强度的估计值而变化。我们评估了这六个指数之间的相关性,然后将两个表现最佳的指数压缩成一个单一的主成分(多变量城市耐受性指数),该指数捕获了物种间城市耐受性的变化。我们使用24种已被充分描述其对城市栖息地耐受性或回避性的测试物种,以及先前发表的独立城市耐受性估计值,评估了我们的单变量和多变量城市耐受性指数的准确性。在这里,我们提供了这个新的物种水平城市耐受性估计数据集,该数据集通过纳入大陆尺度的连续估计值改进了先前的指标,与现有的分类方法相比,能更好地区分物种对城市栖息地的耐受性。这些改进的指标可用于检验将生态、生活史和行为特征与鸟类城市耐受性联系起来的假设。该数据集根据知识共享署名4.0国际许可协议授权。如果在出版物和科学报告中使用,用户必须适当地引用数据论文和数据集。