Centre for Ecology and Conservation, University of Exeter, Penryn, Cornwall, United Kingdom.
Organisms and Environment Division, Cardiff School of Biosciences, Cardiff University, Cardiff, Wales, United Kingdom.
PeerJ. 2024 Jul 11;12:e17565. doi: 10.7717/peerj.17565. eCollection 2024.
Urban populations of herring gulls () are increasing and causing human-wildlife conflict by exploiting anthropogenic resources. Gulls that breed in urban areas rely on varying amounts of terrestrial anthropogenic foods (., domestic refuse, agricultural and commercial waste) to feed themselves. However, with the onset of hatching, many parent gulls switch to sourcing more marine than anthropogenic or terrestrial foods to provision their chicks. Although anthropogenic foods may meet chick calorific requirements for growth and development, some such foods (., bread) may have lower levels of protein and other key nutrients compared to marine foods. However, whether this parental switch in chick diet is driven by chicks' preference for marine foods, or whether chicks' food preferences are shaped by the food types provisioned by their parents, remains untested. This study tests whether chick food preferences can be influenced by their provisioned diet by experimentally manipulating the ratio of time for which anthropogenic and marine foods were available (80:20 and ) in the rearing diets of two treatment groups of rescued herring gull chicks. Each diet was randomly assigned to each of the 27 captive-reared chicks for the duration of the study. We tested chicks' individual food preferences throughout their development in captivity using food arrays with four food choices (fish, cat food, mussels and brown bread). Regardless of the dietary treatment group, we found that all chicks preferred fish and almost all refused to eat most of the bread offered. Our findings suggest that early-life diet, manipulated by the ratio of time the different foods were available, did not influence gull chicks' food preferences. Instead, chicks developed a strong and persistent preference for marine foods, which appears to match adult gulls' dietary switch to marine foods upon chick hatching and may reinforce the provisioning of marine foods during chick development. However, whether chicks in the wild would refuse provisioned foods, and to a sufficient extent to influence parental provisioning, requires further study. Longitudinal studies of urban animal populations that track wild individuals' food preferences and foraging specialisations throughout life are required to shed light on the development and use of anthropogenic resource exploitation.
城市环境中的银鸥种群数量正在增加,并通过利用人为资源而引发人与野生动物的冲突。在城市地区繁殖的海鸥依靠不同数量的陆地人为食物(如,家庭垃圾、农业和商业废物)来养活自己。然而,随着孵化的开始,许多亲鸟会转而更多地从海洋中获取食物,而不是从人为或陆地食物中获取食物来喂养它们的幼鸟。尽管人为食物可能满足幼鸟生长和发育的热量需求,但与海洋食物相比,一些人为食物(如面包)的蛋白质和其他关键营养素水平可能较低。然而,这种亲鸟在雏鸟饮食上的转变是由雏鸟对海洋食物的偏好驱动的,还是雏鸟的食物偏好是由它们父母提供的食物类型塑造的,这仍然没有得到验证。本研究通过在两组获救的银鸥雏鸟的饲养饮食中,实验性地操纵人为食物和海洋食物的可获取时间比例(80:20 和 ),来测试雏鸟的食物偏好是否可以受到其饲养饮食的影响。在研究过程中,每个饮食都随机分配给 27 只圈养繁殖的雏鸟中的每一只。我们使用包含四种食物选择(鱼、猫粮、贻贝和棕色面包)的食物拼盘,在整个圈养期间测试了雏鸟的个体食物偏好。无论饮食处理组如何,我们发现所有的雏鸟都喜欢鱼,几乎都拒绝吃提供的大部分面包。我们的研究结果表明,早期的生活饮食,通过不同食物可获取时间的比例来操纵,并没有影响海鸥雏鸟的食物偏好。相反,雏鸟形成了对海洋食物的强烈而持久的偏好,这似乎与成年海鸥在雏鸟孵化时对海洋食物的饮食转变相匹配,并可能在雏鸟发育期间加强海洋食物的供应。然而,野生雏鸟是否会拒绝提供的食物,以及在多大程度上影响亲鸟的提供,还需要进一步研究。需要对城市动物种群进行纵向研究,跟踪野生个体一生中的食物偏好和觅食专业化,以揭示人为资源利用的开发和利用。