Luna, A., Palma, A., Sanz-Aguilar, A., Tella, J. L and Carrete, M., 2019 Personality-dependent breeding dispersal in rural but not urban burrowing owls. Scientific Report, 9, Article number: 2886 (2019)
Abstract: Dispersal propensity has been correlated with personality traits,
conspecific density and predation risk in a variety of species. Thus,
changes in the relative frequency of behavioural phenotypes or in the
ecological pressures faced by individuals in contrasting habitats can
have unexpected effects on their dispersal strategies. Here, using the
burrowing owl
Athene cunicularia as a study model, we test
whether changes in the behavioural profile of individuals and changes in
conspecific density and predation pressure associated with urban life
influence their breeding dispersal decisions compared to rural
conspecifics. Our results show that breeding dispersal behaviour differs
between rural and urban individuals. Site fidelity was lower among
rural than among urban birds, and primarily related to an individual’s
behaviours (fear of humans), which has been reported to reflect
individual personality. In contrast, the main determinant of site
fidelity among urban owls was conspecific density. After taking the
decision of dispersing, urban owls moved shorter distances than rural
ones, with females dispersing farther than males. Our results support a
personality-dependent dispersal pattern that might vary with predation
risk. However, as multiple individuals of two populations (one urban,
one rural) were used for this research, differences can thus also be
caused by other factors differing between the two populations. Further
research is needed to properly understand the ecological and
evolutionary consequences of changes in dispersal behaviours, especially
in terms of population structuring and gene flow between urban and
rural populations.
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