Innovative Foraging Behavior of Urban Birds: Use of Insect Food Provided by Cars
Metadatos
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MDPI
Materia
Urbanization Novel behavior Traits
Fecha
2024-08-10Referencia bibliográfica
Jokimäki, J.; Ramos-Chernenko, A. Innovative Foraging Behavior of Urban Birds: Use of Insect Food Provided by Cars. Birds 2024, 5, 469–486. https://doi.org/10.3390/birds5030032
Patrocinador
University of Granada, Spain, within its International Mobility Program for Doctorate Students (“Programa Movilidad Internacional Estudiantes de Doctorado”)Resumen
Despite high-quality insect food being often restricted in cities, insects are important for
the development of birds. Nonetheless, plenty of insects are smashed on cars, and they are available
for those species that are able to use them. We used both our own data and community science and
Internet sources for surveying global, national, and local data about birds using insects on cars. Our
results contained a total of 308 observations of birds collecting insects on car panels, which indicated
that 39 species used this food resource since 1928 in 33 countries. Most observations considered
the House Sparrow, followed by the WhiteWagtail and several species of corvids. European urban
bird species observed to use insects on cars had a larger residual brain size. There was also some
indication that bird species using insects on cars had a larger number of innovations (i.e., production
of novel behaviors), greater diet generalism, and longer times living in urbanized areas than birds
not observed using insects on cars. Often these species are also resident and able to use food offered
in feeding sites. We assume that more bird species will use insects on cars in the future, as urban
insect populations continue to decline, and thereby insects on cars will increasingly become more
important sources of food for urban birds.