2016
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.13395
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Urbanization and biological invasion shape animal personalities

Abstract: Novel selective pressures derived from human activities challenge the persistence of animal populations worldwide. Behavior is expected to be a major factor driving animals' responses to global change because it largely determines how animals interact with the environment. However, the role of individual variation in behavior to facilitate the persistence of animals in changing environments remains poorly understood. Here, we adopted an animal personality approach to investigate whether different behavioral tr… Show more

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Cited by 104 publications
(68 citation statements)
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“…Finally, urban individuals may show behavioral differences with nonurban individuals (i.e., bold personality, reduced antipredator behavior, and decreased fear to humans) (Charmantier et al., ; Griffin et al., ; Lapiedra, Chejanovski, & Kolbe, ; Samia, Nakagawa, Nomura, Rangel, & Blumstein, ; Sepp et al., ; Sol et al., ; see also Atwell et al., ). However, we found no support to the “habituation‐induced stress response hypothesis.” Species inhabiting natural, rural, and urban locations, and individuals of the same species in rural and urban locations, showed similar BR at handling.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Finally, urban individuals may show behavioral differences with nonurban individuals (i.e., bold personality, reduced antipredator behavior, and decreased fear to humans) (Charmantier et al., ; Griffin et al., ; Lapiedra, Chejanovski, & Kolbe, ; Samia, Nakagawa, Nomura, Rangel, & Blumstein, ; Sepp et al., ; Sol et al., ; see also Atwell et al., ). However, we found no support to the “habituation‐induced stress response hypothesis.” Species inhabiting natural, rural, and urban locations, and individuals of the same species in rural and urban locations, showed similar BR at handling.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Humans in cities seldom pose direct threat to free‐living animals like birds (Clucas & Marzluff, ); thus, greater risk‐taking (e.g., reduced avoidance) toward humans can be advantageous in urban habitats. Reduced flight responses have been observed in many urban animals (Samia, Nakagawa, Nomura, Rangel, & Blumstein, ), including birds (Carrete & Tella, ; Møller et al, ; Myers & Hyman, ; Vincze et al, ), mammals (McCleery, ; Uchida, Suzuki, Shimamoto, Yanagawa, & Koizumi, ), and reptiles (Lapiedra, Chejanovski, & Kolbe, ; McGowan, Patel, Stroh, & Blumstein, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Alternatively, if the percentage of attacks that result in successful prey capture is higher in subsidized plots (e.g., because marine‐derived prey are easier to capture than terrestrial prey on average), then foraging in seaweed would not necessarily be associated with increased attack rate. Finally, it is possible that the observed shift in habitat use and activity was due to exploratory behavior by lizards in response to a novel stimulus (i.e., the addition of seaweed) (Lapiedra, Chejanovski, & Kolbe, ). Given that we have previously documented diet shifts in response to subsidy, we suspect that both exploratory and foraging responses are likely involved in the habitat and activity shift.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%