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No overall effect of urbanization on nest-dwelling arthropods of great tits (Parus major).
Authors:Baardsen  Lisa F.  De Bruyn  Luc  Adriaensen  Frank  Elst  Joris  Strubbe  Diederik  Heylen  Dieter  Matthysen  Erik
Affiliation:1.Evolutionary Ecology Group, Department of Biology, University of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium
;2.Research Institute for Nature and Forest (INBO), Havenlaan 88, 1000, Brussels, Belgium
;3.Terrestrial Ecology Unit (TEREC), Ghent University, K.L. Ledeganckstraat 32, 9000, Ghent, Belgium
;4.Eco-Epidemiology Group, Department of Biomedical Sciences, Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium
;5.Interuniversity Institute for Biostatistics and statistical Bioinformatics, Hasselt University, Diepenbeek, Belgium
;
Abstract:

Urbanization has been shown to strongly affect community composition of various taxa with potentially strong shifts in ecological interactions, including those between hosts and parasites. We investigated the effect of urbanization on the composition of arthropods in nests of great tits in Flanders, Belgium. These nests contain taxonomically and functionally diverse arthropod communities including parasites, predators, detritivores and accidental commensals. Using a standardized hierarchical sampling design with subplots (200 m?×?200 m) nested in plots (3 km?×?3 km) of varying urbanization levels, we collected arthropods from nests of resident great tits after the young had fledged. Arthropods were extracted, identified to Primary Taxonomical Groups (PTG) and counted. Using generalized linear mixed models (GLMMs) we found diverging effects of urbanization on PTG occurrences and abundances at various levels, but we did not find an overall signal in arthropod diversity or richness. Also, visual inspection of non-metric multidimensional scaling (NMDS) plots did not reveal any community differences between urbanization levels at plot or subplot scales. Land use and environmental variables at different distances around nestboxes did not contribute much to the variation between communities. Our results indicate that arthropod nestbox communities are generally not adversely affected by urbanization, and even city gardens and parks harbor comparable communities to forests and suburban areas. We thus found no evidence for a parasite release effect due to urbanization, nor an increased risk of parasitism in human-dominated environments.

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