Gulls living in cities as overlooked seed dispersers within and outside urban environments

The yellow-legged gull is an opportunistic and generalist bird that has colonised urban areas, where it has found very favourable trophic resources but also causes disturbance to humans and damage to infrastructure. Here, we investigated the potential role that gulls play in the dispersal of plants...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2022-06, Vol.823, p.153535-153535, Article 153535
Hauptverfasser: Martín-Vélez, Víctor, Montalvo, Tomás, Afán, Isabel, Sánchez-Márquez, Antoni, Aymí, Raül, Figuerola, Jordi, Lovas-Kiss, Ádám, Navarro, Joan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The yellow-legged gull is an opportunistic and generalist bird that has colonised urban areas, where it has found very favourable trophic resources but also causes disturbance to humans and damage to infrastructure. Here, we investigated the potential role that gulls play in the dispersal of plants in Barcelona, a highly populated city of north-eastern Spain. We analysed the stomach contents of 145 chicks collected in urban nests and reported the presence of seeds of 27 plant taxa. We then developed a plant dispersal model based on the movements of 20 GPS-tracked yellow-legged gulls breeding in the city of Barcelona. We estimated seed dispersal distances, seed shadows and percentage of seeds reaching habitats suitable for seeds regurgitated in pellets and those excreted in faeces. Seven of the 27 plant taxa found in the stomachs were alien taxa to Spain. Average dispersal distances of plant seeds by gulls were around 700 m, but maximum dispersal distances reached up to 35 km. Dispersal distances and seed spatial patterns did not differ between faeces and pellet models, as most strongly depended on gull movements. About 95% of the seeds were dispersed within urban environments and between 20 and 30% reached suitable habitats for seed deposition (urban woodlands, green urban parks and urban grasslands). Urban gulls frequently dispersed seeds (including alien species) within urban habitats, both via direct consumption or via secondary dispersal after consuming granivorous birds that had ingested the seeds, such as pigeons or parakeets. Urban planning for Barcelona is based on native plant species, and thus, special attention should be paid to alien plants dispersed by birds, which could pose a risk to native biodiversity in urban ecosystems. [Display omitted] •Urban gulls transport seeds within cities by primary and secondary dispersal.•Seed dispersal through pellet deposition was spatially modelled for the first time.•Seven alien plant species were reported for seed dispersal within Barcelona.•Around 30% of the seeds dispersed were deposited at suitable green urban areas.
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.153535