Cities: how do some birds thrive there?

Do you know that most humans now live in cities? This has caused a lot of trouble for many animal species. But a few opportunistic animals, like crows and pigeons that you commonly encounter in cities, benefit from dense human habitation. How does a very urbanized, paved, and populated landscape man...

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Main Authors: Kumar, N, Gupta, U, Jhala, Y, Qureshi, Q, Gosler, A, Sergio, F
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media SA 2020
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author Kumar, N
Gupta, U
Jhala, Y
Qureshi, Q
Gosler, A
Sergio, F
author_facet Kumar, N
Gupta, U
Jhala, Y
Qureshi, Q
Gosler, A
Sergio, F
author_sort Kumar, N
collection OXFORD
description Do you know that most humans now live in cities? This has caused a lot of trouble for many animal species. But a few opportunistic animals, like crows and pigeons that you commonly encounter in cities, benefit from dense human habitation. How does a very urbanized, paved, and populated landscape manage to support enormous flocks of birds in tropical cities? This is mostly unknown for urban birds like me: the Black Kite Milvus migrans. Researchers studying me in Delhi show that I depend on the food provided by humans and I prey on other common urban animals, such as pigeons and rats. The researchers of this article looked at the food that Muslims in the Indian subcontinent ritually offer kite birds and the impact these meat offerings have. Their analyses show that kite birds take cues from human activity, preferring densely populated areas in the city, with trees capable of holding a large nest, or road configurations that allow for easy access to human waste and ritual food.
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spelling oxford-uuid:38d40ad0-ec39-466c-9985-5acab7a5eac22022-03-26T13:52:21ZCities: how do some birds thrive there?Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:38d40ad0-ec39-466c-9985-5acab7a5eac2EnglishSymplectic ElementsFrontiers Media SA2020Kumar, NGupta, UJhala, YQureshi, QGosler, ASergio, FDo you know that most humans now live in cities? This has caused a lot of trouble for many animal species. But a few opportunistic animals, like crows and pigeons that you commonly encounter in cities, benefit from dense human habitation. How does a very urbanized, paved, and populated landscape manage to support enormous flocks of birds in tropical cities? This is mostly unknown for urban birds like me: the Black Kite Milvus migrans. Researchers studying me in Delhi show that I depend on the food provided by humans and I prey on other common urban animals, such as pigeons and rats. The researchers of this article looked at the food that Muslims in the Indian subcontinent ritually offer kite birds and the impact these meat offerings have. Their analyses show that kite birds take cues from human activity, preferring densely populated areas in the city, with trees capable of holding a large nest, or road configurations that allow for easy access to human waste and ritual food.
spellingShingle Kumar, N
Gupta, U
Jhala, Y
Qureshi, Q
Gosler, A
Sergio, F
Cities: how do some birds thrive there?
title Cities: how do some birds thrive there?
title_full Cities: how do some birds thrive there?
title_fullStr Cities: how do some birds thrive there?
title_full_unstemmed Cities: how do some birds thrive there?
title_short Cities: how do some birds thrive there?
title_sort cities how do some birds thrive there
work_keys_str_mv AT kumarn citieshowdosomebirdsthrivethere
AT guptau citieshowdosomebirdsthrivethere
AT jhalay citieshowdosomebirdsthrivethere
AT qureshiq citieshowdosomebirdsthrivethere
AT goslera citieshowdosomebirdsthrivethere
AT sergiof citieshowdosomebirdsthrivethere