2022
DOI: 10.3389/fcosc.2022.761449
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A Theory of City Biogeography and the Origin of Urban Species

Abstract: Many of the choices humans make with regard to infrastructure, urban planning and other phenomena have impacts that will last thousands of years. This can readily be seen in modern cities in which contemporary streets run along street grids that were laid out thousands of years prior or even in which ancient viaducts still play a role. However, rarely do evolutionary biologists explicitly consider the future of life likely to be associated with the decisions we are making today. Here, we consider the evolution… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…We still know surprisingly little about how these ecological and evolutionary changes compare across diverse taxa and regions, their mechanisms and the extent to which they are parallel. Recent calls for implementing a more systematic framework and experimental approaches to evaluate species' evolutionary responses and plasticity stress the importance of rigorous sampling and comparable measures of urban features in ecological and genetic studies (Dunn et al, 2022; Fusco et al, 2021). A promising approach is to focus on how urbanization affects other successful social species.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We still know surprisingly little about how these ecological and evolutionary changes compare across diverse taxa and regions, their mechanisms and the extent to which they are parallel. Recent calls for implementing a more systematic framework and experimental approaches to evaluate species' evolutionary responses and plasticity stress the importance of rigorous sampling and comparable measures of urban features in ecological and genetic studies (Dunn et al, 2022; Fusco et al, 2021). A promising approach is to focus on how urbanization affects other successful social species.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We here show how, by assigning functional identities to each species in the island's assemblage, it is possible to derive the assumptions of island biogeographic theory which, in essence, describes the macroecological state of an island in a given time from the description of island's communities interactions. Through the test of time (Patiño et al 2017;Whittaker et al 2017), island biogeography theory proved to be a milestone idea in ecology and evolution, allowing us to understand the impact of ecological dynamics and historical contingencies on the biodiversity of a broad range of systems beyond islands (e.g., Dawson 2016; Ottaviani et al 2020, Dunn et al 2022. Given the essentially transferable nature of trait-based approaches (Weiss & Ray 2019), addressing island biogeography models through a mechanistic description of trait states is a key step to generalise these predictions even further.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Originally including feral cats and any species "not normally domesticated", the ban was narrowed to only include waterfowl and deer after residents complained that the definition of "wild animal" was too broad and would have prohibited feeding species liked by many, such as squirrels and alley cats. Extending a trend to also look at the positive aspects of the urbanization/wildlife interface, Cooper et al [29] recently showed that secondary cities offer a better habitat for wildlife than do large cities such as Los Angeles, and Dunn et al [30] concluded that urban species residing in gray zones-areas high in built structures and low in vegetation-have a greater potential for evolutionary innovations to emerge than those residing in the green habitats more traditionally studied.…”
Section: Vertebratesmentioning
confidence: 99%