Nest boxes buffer the effects of climate on breeding performance in an African urban raptor (dataset)

As the world’s human population increases, transformation of natural landscapes into urban habitats continues to increase. In Africa, rates of human population growth and urbanisation are among the highest in the world, but the impacts of these processes on the continent’s biodiversity remain largel...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Petra Sumasgutner, Andrew Jenkins, Arjun Amar, Res Altwegg
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.25375/uct.12192186.v1
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Nest_boxes_buffer_the_effects_of_climate_on_breeding_performance_in_an_African_urban_raptor_dataset_/12192186
id ftunicapetownfig:oai:figshare.com:article/12192186
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunicapetownfig:oai:figshare.com:article/12192186 2023-05-15T16:09:55+02:00 Nest boxes buffer the effects of climate on breeding performance in an African urban raptor (dataset) Petra Sumasgutner Andrew Jenkins Arjun Amar Res Altwegg 2020-04-26T10:15:15Z https://doi.org/10.25375/uct.12192186.v1 https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Nest_boxes_buffer_the_effects_of_climate_on_breeding_performance_in_an_African_urban_raptor_dataset_/12192186 unknown doi:10.25375/uct.12192186.v1 https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Nest_boxes_buffer_the_effects_of_climate_on_breeding_performance_in_an_African_urban_raptor_dataset_/12192186 CC BY 4.0 CC-BY Population Ecology urbanisation urban gradient cavity nesting cliff nesting Falco peregrinus Cimate change Global warming timing of breeding phenology Cape Town South Africa Dataset 2020 ftunicapetownfig https://doi.org/10.25375/uct.12192186.v1 2022-01-11T13:20:39Z As the world’s human population increases, transformation of natural landscapes into urban habitats continues to increase. In Africa, rates of human population growth and urbanisation are among the highest in the world, but the impacts of these processes on the continent’s biodiversity remain largely unexplored. Furthermore, the effects of ongoing anthropogenic climate change are likely to be severe and to interact with urbanisation. Some organisms appear resilient to urbanisation, and even proliferate in human-modified environments. One such species is the peregrine falcon Falco peregrinus in Cape Town, South Africa. Using a long-term data set (1989-2014), we investigate the relationship between breeding attempts, timing of breeding and breeding performance under varying weather conditions. Exploring these issues along an urbanisation gradient, we focus on the role of artificially provided nest boxes, and their capacity to buffer against extreme weather events. Pairs in more urbanised areas, and particularly those in nest boxes, were more likely to breed and to commence breeding earlier. Additionally, pairs using nest boxes were more likely to breed in years with higher rainfall. Warm and dry weather conditions generally advanced the timing of breeding, although this relationship with weather was not seen for urban pairs using nest boxes. Furthermore, weather did not impact breeding performance directly (breeding success and fledged brood size), but timing of breeding did, with earlier breeders producing more fledglings. Our study shows that falcons breeding in specially provided nest boxes were less sensitive to local weather dynamics than pairs using more natural nest sites. This has important implications as it suggests that the managed provision of such nesting sites can help this key urban species to cope with extreme weather events, which are predicted to increase with climate change. Dataset Falco peregrinus peregrine falcon University of Cape Town: Figshare
institution Open Polar
collection University of Cape Town: Figshare
op_collection_id ftunicapetownfig
language unknown
topic Population Ecology
urbanisation
urban gradient
cavity nesting
cliff nesting
Falco peregrinus
Cimate change
Global warming
timing of breeding
phenology
Cape Town
South Africa
spellingShingle Population Ecology
urbanisation
urban gradient
cavity nesting
cliff nesting
Falco peregrinus
Cimate change
Global warming
timing of breeding
phenology
Cape Town
South Africa
Petra Sumasgutner
Andrew Jenkins
Arjun Amar
Res Altwegg
Nest boxes buffer the effects of climate on breeding performance in an African urban raptor (dataset)
topic_facet Population Ecology
urbanisation
urban gradient
cavity nesting
cliff nesting
Falco peregrinus
Cimate change
Global warming
timing of breeding
phenology
Cape Town
South Africa
description As the world’s human population increases, transformation of natural landscapes into urban habitats continues to increase. In Africa, rates of human population growth and urbanisation are among the highest in the world, but the impacts of these processes on the continent’s biodiversity remain largely unexplored. Furthermore, the effects of ongoing anthropogenic climate change are likely to be severe and to interact with urbanisation. Some organisms appear resilient to urbanisation, and even proliferate in human-modified environments. One such species is the peregrine falcon Falco peregrinus in Cape Town, South Africa. Using a long-term data set (1989-2014), we investigate the relationship between breeding attempts, timing of breeding and breeding performance under varying weather conditions. Exploring these issues along an urbanisation gradient, we focus on the role of artificially provided nest boxes, and their capacity to buffer against extreme weather events. Pairs in more urbanised areas, and particularly those in nest boxes, were more likely to breed and to commence breeding earlier. Additionally, pairs using nest boxes were more likely to breed in years with higher rainfall. Warm and dry weather conditions generally advanced the timing of breeding, although this relationship with weather was not seen for urban pairs using nest boxes. Furthermore, weather did not impact breeding performance directly (breeding success and fledged brood size), but timing of breeding did, with earlier breeders producing more fledglings. Our study shows that falcons breeding in specially provided nest boxes were less sensitive to local weather dynamics than pairs using more natural nest sites. This has important implications as it suggests that the managed provision of such nesting sites can help this key urban species to cope with extreme weather events, which are predicted to increase with climate change.
format Dataset
author Petra Sumasgutner
Andrew Jenkins
Arjun Amar
Res Altwegg
author_facet Petra Sumasgutner
Andrew Jenkins
Arjun Amar
Res Altwegg
author_sort Petra Sumasgutner
title Nest boxes buffer the effects of climate on breeding performance in an African urban raptor (dataset)
title_short Nest boxes buffer the effects of climate on breeding performance in an African urban raptor (dataset)
title_full Nest boxes buffer the effects of climate on breeding performance in an African urban raptor (dataset)
title_fullStr Nest boxes buffer the effects of climate on breeding performance in an African urban raptor (dataset)
title_full_unstemmed Nest boxes buffer the effects of climate on breeding performance in an African urban raptor (dataset)
title_sort nest boxes buffer the effects of climate on breeding performance in an african urban raptor (dataset)
publishDate 2020
url https://doi.org/10.25375/uct.12192186.v1
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Nest_boxes_buffer_the_effects_of_climate_on_breeding_performance_in_an_African_urban_raptor_dataset_/12192186
genre Falco peregrinus
peregrine falcon
genre_facet Falco peregrinus
peregrine falcon
op_relation doi:10.25375/uct.12192186.v1
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Nest_boxes_buffer_the_effects_of_climate_on_breeding_performance_in_an_African_urban_raptor_dataset_/12192186
op_rights CC BY 4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.25375/uct.12192186.v1
_version_ 1765995174868025344