Ground beetles in city forests: does urbanization predict a personality trait?

Background Urbanization leads to substantial changes in natural habitats with profound effects on wildlife. Understanding behavioural responses to such environmental change is essential for identifying which organisms may adapt, as behaviour is often the first response to altered conditions. Individ...

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Main Authors: Wiebke Schuett, Berit Delfs, Richard Haller, Sarah Kruber, Simone Roolfs, Desiree Timm, Magdalena Willmann, Claudia Drees
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2018-02-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/4360.pdf
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spelling doaj-202b52facefe4a938427b143a72bab852020-11-24T21:54:03ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592018-02-016e436010.7717/peerj.4360Ground beetles in city forests: does urbanization predict a personality trait?Wiebke Schuett0Berit Delfs1Richard Haller2Sarah Kruber3Simone Roolfs4Desiree Timm5Magdalena Willmann6Claudia Drees7Zoological Institute, Biocenter Grindel, Universität Hamburg, Hamburg, GermanyZoological Institute, Biocenter Grindel, Universität Hamburg, Hamburg, GermanyZoological Institute, Biocenter Grindel, Universität Hamburg, Hamburg, GermanyZoological Institute, Biocenter Grindel, Universität Hamburg, Hamburg, GermanyZoological Institute, Biocenter Grindel, Universität Hamburg, Hamburg, GermanyZoological Institute, Biocenter Grindel, Universität Hamburg, Hamburg, GermanyZoological Institute, Biocenter Grindel, Universität Hamburg, Hamburg, GermanyZoological Institute, Biocenter Grindel, Universität Hamburg, Hamburg, GermanyBackground Urbanization leads to substantial changes in natural habitats with profound effects on wildlife. Understanding behavioural responses to such environmental change is essential for identifying which organisms may adapt, as behaviour is often the first response to altered conditions. Individuals in more urbanized habitats may be expected to be more exploratory and bolder than their conspecifics in less urbanized habitats as they may be better able to cope with novel challenges. Methods In a two-year field study we tested ground beetles from differently urbanized forests for their exploratory behaviour (in a novel environment) and their risk-taking (death-feigning). In total, we tested ca. 3,000 individuals of four forest-dwelling ground beetle species from eight within-city forest patches. In the second year, we also transferred ca. 800 tested individuals of two species to the laboratory to test for consistent behavioural differences (i.e. personality differences) under standardised conditions. Results Individuals were generally more exploratory in more urbanized than in less urbanized areas but only in one year of the study. Exploratory behaviour was not predicted by population density but increased with temperature or showed a temperature optimum. Exploration was consistent over time and individuals that were more exploratory also took higher risks. Discussion We demonstrated that species which are generally less directly exposed to human activities (e.g., most invertebrates) show behavioural responses to urbanization. Effects of urbanization were year-dependent, suggesting that other environmental conditions interacted with effects of urbanization on beetle behaviour. Furthermore, our results indicate that different personality compositions might cause behavioural differences among populations living in differently urbanized habitats.https://peerj.com/articles/4360.pdfAnthropogenic changeBoldnessCarabidDensityEnvironmental driverExploration
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wiebke Schuett
Berit Delfs
Richard Haller
Sarah Kruber
Simone Roolfs
Desiree Timm
Magdalena Willmann
Claudia Drees
spellingShingle Wiebke Schuett
Berit Delfs
Richard Haller
Sarah Kruber
Simone Roolfs
Desiree Timm
Magdalena Willmann
Claudia Drees
Ground beetles in city forests: does urbanization predict a personality trait?
PeerJ
Anthropogenic change
Boldness
Carabid
Density
Environmental driver
Exploration
author_facet Wiebke Schuett
Berit Delfs
Richard Haller
Sarah Kruber
Simone Roolfs
Desiree Timm
Magdalena Willmann
Claudia Drees
author_sort Wiebke Schuett
title Ground beetles in city forests: does urbanization predict a personality trait?
title_short Ground beetles in city forests: does urbanization predict a personality trait?
title_full Ground beetles in city forests: does urbanization predict a personality trait?
title_fullStr Ground beetles in city forests: does urbanization predict a personality trait?
title_full_unstemmed Ground beetles in city forests: does urbanization predict a personality trait?
title_sort ground beetles in city forests: does urbanization predict a personality trait?
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Background Urbanization leads to substantial changes in natural habitats with profound effects on wildlife. Understanding behavioural responses to such environmental change is essential for identifying which organisms may adapt, as behaviour is often the first response to altered conditions. Individuals in more urbanized habitats may be expected to be more exploratory and bolder than their conspecifics in less urbanized habitats as they may be better able to cope with novel challenges. Methods In a two-year field study we tested ground beetles from differently urbanized forests for their exploratory behaviour (in a novel environment) and their risk-taking (death-feigning). In total, we tested ca. 3,000 individuals of four forest-dwelling ground beetle species from eight within-city forest patches. In the second year, we also transferred ca. 800 tested individuals of two species to the laboratory to test for consistent behavioural differences (i.e. personality differences) under standardised conditions. Results Individuals were generally more exploratory in more urbanized than in less urbanized areas but only in one year of the study. Exploratory behaviour was not predicted by population density but increased with temperature or showed a temperature optimum. Exploration was consistent over time and individuals that were more exploratory also took higher risks. Discussion We demonstrated that species which are generally less directly exposed to human activities (e.g., most invertebrates) show behavioural responses to urbanization. Effects of urbanization were year-dependent, suggesting that other environmental conditions interacted with effects of urbanization on beetle behaviour. Furthermore, our results indicate that different personality compositions might cause behavioural differences among populations living in differently urbanized habitats.
topic Anthropogenic change
Boldness
Carabid
Density
Environmental driver
Exploration
url https://peerj.com/articles/4360.pdf
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