Urbanization affects spatial variation and species similarity of bird diversity distribution

  • Bin Sun
  • , Yonglong Lu*
  • , Yifu Yang
  • , Mingzhao Yu
  • , Jingjing Yuan
  • , Ran Yu
  • , James M. Bullock
  • , Nils Chr Stenseth
  • , Xia Li
  • , Zhiwei Cao
  • , Haojie Lei
  • , Jialong Li
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

78 Scopus citations

Abstract

Although cities are human-dominated systems, they provide habitat for many other species. Because of the lack of long-term observation data, it is challenging to assess the impacts of rapid urbanization on biodiversity in Global South countries. Using multisource data, we provided the first analysis of the impacts of urbanization on bird distribution at the continental scale and found that the distributional hot spots of threatened birds overlapped greatly with urbanized areas, with only 3.90% of the threatened birds’ preferred land cover type in urban built-up areas. Bird ranges are being reshaped differently because of their different adaptations to urbanization. While green infrastructure can improve local bird diversity, the homogeneous urban environment also leads to species compositions being more similar across regions. More attention should be paid to narrow-range species for the formulation of biodiversity conservation strategies, and conservation actions should be further coordinated among cities from a global perspective.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbereade3061
JournalScience Advances
Volume8
Issue number49
DOIs
StatePublished - 7 Dec 2022

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