Colourful Urban Birds: Bird Species Successful in Urban Environments Have More Elaborate Colours and Less Brown
Metadatos
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Wiley
Materia
Avian coloration Birds Camouflage Sexual dichromatism Urbanisation
Fecha
2025-04-04Referencia bibliográfica
Ibáñez-Álamo, J. D., Delhey, K., Izquierdo, L., Valcu, M., & Kempenaers, B. (2025). Colourful urban birds: Bird species successful in urban environments have more elaborate colours and less brown. Ecology Letters, 28(4), e70106. https://doi.org/10.1111/ele.70106
Patrocinador
Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities (project PID2019-107423GA-I00); Max Planck SocietyResumen
Rapidly expanding urbanisation presents significant challenges to wildlife. Consequently, many studies have investigated the
impact of urbanisation on diverse organisms. However, despite the ecological relevance of animal colouration, its association
with urbanisation remains poorly understood. Using a global database, we computed an index of urban success for 1287
bird species and quantified its association with estimates of plumage colour. Our analyses showed that birds that do well in
urban environments are more likely to be blue, dark grey and black, and less likely to be brown or yellow. After considering
phylogenetic relatedness, only the effects of yellow and brown remained significant. Species with high urban success also
exhibit more elaborate colours, but not higher sexual dichromatism. We provide eco-evolutionary explanations for these results. Assemblage-level analyses did not support the urban colour homogenisation hypothesis: Urban bird communities were
more colour-diverse after accounting for species richness. Our findings suggest that plumage colours are part of an urbanassociated syndrome.





