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The effects of human population density on trophic interactions are contingent upon latitude

Hernández-Agüero Juan A.; Ruiz-Tapiador Ildefonso; Garibaldi Lucas A.; Kozlov Mikhail V.; Mäntylä Elina; Nacif Marcos E.; Salinas Norma; Cayuela Luis

The effects of human population density on trophic interactions are contingent upon latitude

Hernández-Agüero Juan A.
Ruiz-Tapiador Ildefonso
Garibaldi Lucas A.
Kozlov Mikhail V.
Mäntylä Elina
Nacif Marcos E.
Salinas Norma
Cayuela Luis
Katso/Avaa
Global Ecology and Biogeography - 2024 - Hernández‐Agüero - The effects of human population density on trophic interactions.pdf (5.482Mb)
Lataukset: 

Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
doi:10.1111/geb.13849
URI
https://doi.org/10.1111/geb.13849
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Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on:
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2025082787284
Tiivistelmä

Aim

Global-scale studies are necessary to draw general conclusions on how trophic interactions vary with urbanization and to explore how the effects of urbanization change along latitudinal gradients. We predict that the intensity of trophic interactions decreases in response to urbanization (quantified by human population density). Since trophic interactions are more intense at lower latitudes, we also expect major impacts of urbanization at higher latitudes, where base levels are essentially lower.

Location

Global (881 study sites).

Time period

2000–2021.

Major taxa studied

Birds, arthropods and woody plants.

Methods

We compiled global data on insect herbivory and bird predation from studies that employed similar methods and fitted generalized linear mixed models to test how these trophic interactions vary with human population density, latitude and their interactions.

Results

The intensity of herbivory and predation decreased with an increase in human population density at lower latitudes. Surprisingly, it remained unaffected at intermediate latitudes and even increased at higher latitudes.

Main conclusions

The observed patterns may be attributed to local climate changes in urban areas, such as the Urban Heat Island effect, which disrupts thermal stability in the tropics while increasing niche availability at polar latitudes.

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