Environment Analysis and Management Unit, Guido Tosi Research Group, Department of Theoretical and Applied Sciences, Università degli Studi dell'Insubria, via J. H. Dunant 3, 21100 Varese, Italy.
Environment Analysis and Management Unit, Guido Tosi Research Group, Department of Theoretical and Applied Sciences, Università degli Studi dell'Insubria, via J. H. Dunant 3, 21100 Varese, Italy; Evolutionary Ecology Group, Department of Biology, University of Antwerp, Campus Drie Eiken Universiteitsplein 1, 2610 Wilrijk, Belgium.
Sci Total Environ. 2024 Apr 20;922:171336. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.171336. Epub 2024 Feb 27.
Novel pressures derived from urbanisation can alter native habitats and ultimately impact wildlife. Coping with such human-driven changes might induce shifts in species phenotypic traits, such as physiological responses to anthropogenic stressors. Preadaptation to face those challenges has been suggested to favour settlement and spread of invasive alien species in urbanised areas which, consequently, might respond differently than ecologically similar native species to stressors posed by urbanisation. The activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and the subsequent release of glucocorticoids (GCs) has been suggested to mediate responses to anthropogenic disturbance in vertebrates. Furthermore, intraspecific competition, in conjunction with stressors related to urbanisation, might affect invasive and native species physiological stress responses differently. Using a parallel pseudo-experimental study system we measured faecal glucocorticoid metabolite (FGM) concentrations of the native Eurasian red squirrel and the invasive alien Eastern grey squirrel along a rural-urban gradient and in relation to conspecific density. The two species responded differently to challenges posed by the synergic effect of urbanisation and intraspecific competition. Association of FGMs and conspecific density in native red squirrels varied between rural and suburban sites, potentially depending on differential HPA axis responses. In urban sites, this relationship did not differ significantly from that in rural and suburban ones. Conversely, invasive grey squirrels' FGMs did not vary in relation to conspecific density, nor differed along the rural-urban gradient. Improving knowledge about native and competing invasive species' physiological responses to anthropogenic stressors can support conservation strategies in habitats altered by man. Our findings suggested that the invasive squirrels might be preadapted to cope with these challenges in urbanised areas, potentially increasing their success under the future global change scenario.
城市化带来的新压力会改变野生动物的栖息地,最终影响它们的生存。应对这些人为变化可能会导致物种表型特征发生变化,例如对人为压力源的生理反应。有人认为,预先适应这些挑战有利于入侵外来物种在城市化地区的定居和扩散,而这些物种可能会对城市化带来的压力做出与生态相似的本地物种不同的反应。下丘脑-垂体-肾上腺 (HPA) 轴的激活以及随后糖皮质激素 (GC) 的释放,被认为可以介导脊椎动物对人为干扰的反应。此外,种内竞争与城市化相关的压力源结合在一起,可能会对入侵物种和本地物种的生理应激反应产生不同的影响。通过平行的拟实验研究系统,我们测量了本地欧亚红松鼠和入侵外来的东部灰松鼠在农村-城市梯度上以及与同种密度相关的粪便糖皮质激素代谢物 (FGM) 浓度。这两个物种对城市化和种内竞争协同作用所带来的挑战的反应不同。在农村和郊区地区,本地红松鼠的 FGMs 与同种密度之间的关系因 HPA 轴反应的差异而不同。在城市地区,这种关系与农村和郊区地区没有显著差异。相反,入侵灰松鼠的 FGMs 与同种密度无关,也没有沿农村-城市梯度发生变化。深入了解本地和竞争入侵物种对人为压力源的生理反应,可以为受人类活动改变的栖息地的保护策略提供支持。我们的研究结果表明,入侵松鼠可能已经预先适应了在城市化地区应对这些挑战,从而有可能在未来的全球变化情景下增加它们的成功机会。