Book Read Free

Darwin Comes to Town

Page 24

by Menno Schilthuizen


  Clements, R., L.P. Koh, T.M. Lee, R. Meyer & D. Li, 2005. Importance of reservoirs for the conservation of freshwater molluscs in a tropical urban landscape. Biological Conservation, 128: 136–146.

  Clergeau, P., A. Vergnes & R. deLanque, 2009. La perruche à collier Psittacula krameri introduite en Île-De-France: distribution et régime alimentaire. Alauda 77: 121–132.

  Cody, M.L. & J.M. Overton, 1996. Short-term evolution of reduced dispersal in island plant populations. Journal of Ecology, 84: 53–61.

  Cohen, A.N. & J.T. Carlton, 1998. Accelerated invasion rate in a highly invaded estuary. Science, 279: 555–558.

  Coldsnow, K.D., B.M. Mattes, W.D. Hintz & R.A. Relyea, 2017. Rapid evolution of tolerance to road salt in zooplankton. Environmental Pollution, 222: 367–373.

  Cook, L.M., 2003. The rise and fall of the carbonaria form of the peppered moth. The Quarterly Review of Biology, 78: 399–417.

  Cook, L.M., R.R. Askew & J.A. Bishop, 1970. Increased frequency of the typical form of the peppered moth in Manchester. Nature, 227: 1155.

  Cook, L.M., B.S. Grant, I.J. Saccheri & J. Mallet, 2012. Selective bird predation on the peppered moth: the last experiment of Michael Majerus. Biology Letters, 8: 609–612.

  Cook, L.M., G.S. Mani & M.E. Varley, 1986. Postindustrial melanism in the peppered moth. Science, 231: 611–613.

  Cook, L.M. & I.J. Saccheri, 2013. The peppered moth and industrial melanism: evolution of a natural selection case study. Heredity, 110: 207–212.

  Coyne, J. A., 1998. Not black and white. Review of “melanism: evolution in action” by Michael E.N. Majerus. Nature, 396: 35–36.

  Cramp, S., A. Pettet & J.T.R. Sharrock, 1960. The irruption of tits in autumn 1957. British Birds, 53: 49–77.

  Cucherousset, J., S. Boulêtreau, F. Azémar, A. Compin, M. Guillaume & F. Santoul, 2012. “Freshwater Killer Whales:” Beaching behavior of an alien fish to hunt land birds. PLoS ONE, 7: e50840.

  Daehler, C.C. & D.R. Strong, 1997. Reduced herbivore resistance in introduced smooth cordgrass (Spartina alterniflora) after a century of herbivore-free growth. Oecologia, 110: 99–108.

  Darwin Correspondence Project, 2017. “Letter no. 11747,” accessed on June 9, 2017, http://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/DCP-LETT-11747.

  Davis, M.A., M.K. Chew, R.J. Hobbs, A.E. Lugo, J.J. Ewel, G.J. Vermeij, J.H. Brown, M.L. Rosenzweig, M.R. Gardner, S.P. Carroll, K. Thompson, S.T.A. Pickett, J.C. Stromberg, P. Del Tredici, K.N. Suding, J.G. Ehrenfeld, J.P. Grime, J. Mascaro & J.C. Briggs, 2011. Don’t judge species on their origins. Nature, 474: 153–154.

  Davison, G.W.H., 2007. Urban forest rehabilitation—a case study from Singapore. Pp. 171–181 in: (D.K. Lee, ed.) Keep Asia Green; Vol. 1: “Southeast Asia.” IUFRO, Vienna, Austria.

  Davison, G.W.H., P.K.L. Ng & H.C. Ho, 2008. The Singapore Red Data Book: Threatened Plants and Animals of Singapore. 2nd edition. Nature Society (Singapore), Singapore. 285 pp.

  Decker, P. & T. Tertilt, 2012. First records of two introduced millipedes Anoplodesmus saussurii and Chondromorpha xanthotricha (Diplopoda: Polydesmida: Paradoxosomatidae) in Singapore. Nature in Singapore, 5: 141–149.

  De León, L.F., J.A. Raeymaekers, E. Bermingham, J. Podos, A. Herrel & A.P. Hendry, 2011. Exploring possible human influences on the evolution of Darwin’s finches. Evolution, 65: 2258–2272.

  De León, L.F., D.M.T. Sharpe, K.M. Gotanda, J.A.M. Raeymaekers, J.A. Chaves, A.P. Hendry & J. Podos, 2017. Human foods erode niche segregation in Darwin’s finches. Evolutionary Applications. (in press).

  Diamond, J.M., 1974. Colonization of exploded volcanic islands by birds: the supertramp strategy. Science, 184: 803–806.

  Diamond, S.E., L. Chick, A. Perez, S.A. Strickler & R.A. Martin, 2017. Rapid evolution of ant thermal tolerance across an urban-rural temperature cline. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society doi: 10.1093/biolinnean/blw047.

  Diogo, I.J.S., A.E.R. Holanda, A.L. de Oliveira Filho & C.L.F. Bezerra, 2014. Floristic composition and structure of an urban forest remnant of Fortaleza, Ceará. Gaia Scientia, 8: 266–278.

  Donihue, C.M. & M.R. Lambert, 2015. Adaptive evolution in urban ecosystems. AMBIO, 3: 194–203.

  Dooren, T. van, 2016. The unwelcome crows. Angelaki, 21: 193–212.

  Dunnett, N. & N. Kingsbury, 2004. Planting green roofs and living walls. Portland, OR: Timber Press.

  Eisenbeis, G., 2006. Artificial night lighting and insects: Attraction of insects to streetlamps in a rural setting in Germany. Pp. 281–304 in: Ecological Consequences of Artificial Night Lighting (C. Rich & T. Longcore, eds.). Washington, D.C.: Island Press.

  Elfferich, C., 2011. Natuur Dichtbij; Gewone en Ongewone Natuur in Pijnacker. Caroline Elferrich, Pijnacker, the Netherlands. 84 pp.

  Evans, K.L., K.J. Gaston, S.P. Sharp, A. McGowan & B.J. Hatchwell, 2009a. The effect of urbanisation on avian morphology and latitudinal gradients in body size. Oikos, 118: 251–259.

  Evans, K.L., K.J. Gaston, A.C. Frantz, M. Simeoni, S.P. Sharp, A. McGowan, D.A. Dawson, K. Walasz, J. Partecke, T. Burke & B.J. Hatchwell, 2009b. Independent colonization of multiple urban centers by a formerly forest specialist bird species. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: rspb.2008.1712.

  Evans, K.L., B.J. Hatchwell, M. Parnell & K.J. Gaston, 2010. A conceptual framework for the colonization of urban areas: the blackbird Turdus merula as a case study. Biological Reviews, 85: 643–667.

  Farina, A., P. James, C. Bobryk, N. Pieretti, E. Lattanzi & J. McWilliam, 2014. Low cost (audio) recording (LCR) for advancing soundscape ecology toward the conservation of sonic complexity and biodiversity in natural and urban landscapes. Urban ecosystems, 17: 923–944.

  Feinberg, J.A., C.E. Newman, G.J. Watkins-Colwell, M.D. Schlesinger, B. Zarate, et al., 2014. Cryptic diversity in metropolis: Confirmation of a new leopard frog species (Anura: Ranidae) from New York City and surrounding Atlantic coast regions. PLoS ONE, 9: e108213.

  Field, Y., E.A. Boyle, N. Telis, Z. Gao, K.J. Gaulton, D. Golan, L. Yengo, G. Rocheleau, P. Froguel, M.I. McCarthy & J.K. Pritchard, 2016. Detection of human adaptation during the past 2000 years. Science, 354: 760–764.

  Fisher, J. & R.A. Hinde, 1949. The opening of milk bottles by birds. British Birds, 42: 347–357.

  Fonseca, D.M., N. Keyghobadi, C.A. Malcolm, C. Mehmet, F. Schaffner, M. Mogi, R.C. Fleischer & R.C. Wilkerson, 2004. Emerging vectors in the Culex pipiens complex. Science, 303: 1535–1538.

  Foster, J. & L.A. Sandberg, 2004. Friends or foe? Invasive species and public green space in Toronto. Geographical Review, 94: 178–198.

  Francis, C.D., C.P. Ortega & A. Cruz, 2011. Noise pollution filters bird communities based on vocal frequency. PLoS ONE, 6: e27052.

  Fuller, R.A., P.H. Warren & K.J. Gaston, 2007. Daytime noise predicts nocturnal singing in urban robins. Biology Letters, 3: 368–370.

  Galván, I. & C. Alonso-Alvarez, 2008. An intracellular antioxidant determines the expression of a melanin-based signal in a bird. PLoS ONE, 3: e3335.

  Gaston, K.J., P.H. Warren, K. Thompson & R.M. Smith, 2005. Urban domestic gardens (IV): the extent of the resource and its associated features. Biodiversity and Conservation, 14: 3327–3349.

  Gaston, K.J., J.P. Duffy, S. Gaston, J. Bennie & T.W. Davies, 2014. Human alteration of natural light cycles: causes and ecological consequences. Oecologia, 176: 917–931.

  Gehrt, S.D., 2007. Ecology of coyotes in urban landscapes. Wildlife Damage Management Conferences—Proceedings: Paper 63.

  Gil, D., M. Honarmand, J. Pascual, E. Pérez-Mena & C. Macías Garcia, 2015. Birds living near airports advance their dawn chorus and reduce overlap with aircraft noise. Behavioral Ecology, 26: 435–443.

  Gingerich, P.D., 1993. Quantification and comparison of evolutionary rates. American Journal of Science, 293A: 453–478.

  Godefroid, S., 2001. Temporal analysis of the Brussels flora as indicator for changing environmental quality. Landscape and Urban Planning, 52: 203–224.

  Greggor, A.L., N.S. Clayton, A.J. Fulford & A
. Thornton, 2016. Street smart: faster approach toward litter in urban areas by highly neophobic corvids and less fearful birds. Animal Behavior, 117: 123–133.

  Grégoire, A., 2003. Démographie et différenciation chez le Merle noir Turdus merula: liens avec l’habitat et les relations hôtes-parasites. Doctoral dissertation, Dijon.

  Gross, M., 2016. The urbanisation of our species. Current Biology, 26: R1205-R1208.

  Gunnell, K., C. Williams & B. Murphy, 2013. Designing for Biodiversity: A Technical Guide for New and Existing Buildings. RIBA Publishing, London.

  Guynup, S., 2003. Light pollution taking toll on wildlife, eco-groups say. National Geographic Today, April 17, 2003.

  Gwynne, D.T. & D.C.F. Rentz, 1983. Beetles on the bottle: male buprestids mistake stubbies for females (Coleoptera). Journal of the Australian Entomological Society, 22: 79–80.

  Haberl, H., K.H. Erb, F. Krausmann, V. Gaube, A. Bondeau, C. Plutzar, S. Gingrich, W. Lucht & M. Fischer-Kowalski, 2007. Quantifying and mapping the human appropriation of net primary production in earth’s terrestrial ecosystems. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA, 104: 12942–12947.

  Haldane, J.B.S., 1924. A mathematical theory of natural and artificial selection. Transactions of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, 23: 19–41.

  Halfwerk, W., S. Bot, J. Buikx, M. van der Velde, J. Komdeur, C. ten Cate & H. Slabbekoorn, 2011. Low-frequency songs lose their potency in noisy urban conditions. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA, 108: 14549–14554.

  Harcourt, A.H., 2016. Human phylogeography and diversity. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA, 113: 8072–8078.

  Harper, M.A., D.G. Mann & J.E. Patterson, 2009. Two unusual diatoms from New Zealand: Tabularia variostriata a new species and Eunophora berggrenii. Diatom Research, 24: 291–306.

  Hart, A.G., R. Stafford, A.L. Smith & A.E. Goodenough, 2010. Evidence for contemporary evolution during Darwin’s lifetime. Current Biology, 20: R95.

  Hassell, J.M., M. Begon, M.J. Ward & E.M. Fèvre, 2017. Urbanization and disease emergence: dynamics at the wildlife–livestock–human interface. Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 32: 55–67.

  Heiling, A.M., 1999. Why do nocturnal orb-web spiders (Araneidae) search for light? Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 46: 43–49.

  Helden, A.J. & S.R. Leather, 2004. Biodiversity on urban roundabouts—Hemiptera, management and the species-area relationship. Basic and Applied Ecology, 5: 367–377.

  Hendriks, D., 2014. Woede in Hoek van Holland om afschieten huiskraaien. Algemeen Dagblad, March 6, 2014.

  Hendry, A.P., 2017. Eco-Evolutionary Dynamics. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 416 pp.

  Hendry, A.P., P.R. Grant, B.R. Grant, H.A. Ford, M.J. Brewer & J. Podos, 2006. Possible human impacts on adaptive radiation: beak size bimodality in Darwin’s finches. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B, 273: 1887–1894.

  Hermisson, J. & P.S. Pennings, 2017. Soft sweeps and beyond: Understanding the patterns and probabilities of selection footprints under rapid adaptation. BioRxiv, doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/114587.

  Hill, J.A., D.A. Enstrom, E.D. Ketterson, V. Nolan & C. Ziegenfus, 1999. Mate choice based on static versus dynamic secondary sexual traits in the dark-eyed junco. Behavioral Ecology, 10: 91–96.

  Hinde, R.A. & J. Fisher, 1951. Further observations on the opening of milk bottles by birds. British Birds, 44: 393–396.

  Hochkirch, A., J. Deppermann & J. Gröning, 2008. Phenotypic plasticity in insects: the effects of substrate color on the coloration of two ground-hopper species. Evolution & Development, 10: 350–359.

  Hof, A.E. van ‘t, P. Campagne, D.J. Rigden, C.J. Yung, J. Lingley, M.A. Quail, N. Hall, A.C. Darby & I.J. Saccheri, 2016. The industrial melanism mutation in British peppered moths is a transposable element. Nature, 534: 102–105.

  Hoh, A., 2016. Brush turkeys invading suburban Sydney backyards. ABC News, March 31, 2016.

  Hölldobler, B. & E.O. Wilson, 1990. The Ants. Belknap Press, Cambridge, Massachussetts, USA.

  Hooper, J., 2002. Of Moths and Men. Intrigue, Tragedy and the Peppered Moth. New York: Fourth Estate, 400 pp.

  Hope, D., C. Gries, W. Zhu, W.F. Fagan, C.L. Redman, N.B. Grimm, A.L. Nelson, C. Martin & A. Kinzig, 2003. Socioeconomics drive urban plant diversity. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA, 10: 8788–8792.

  Houska, C., 2016. Deicing salt—recognizing the corrosion threat. http://www.imoa.info/download_files/stainless-steel/DeicingSalt.pdf

  Hu, Y. & G.C. Cardoso, 2010. Which birds adjust the frequency of vocalizations in urban noise? Animal Behavior, 79: 863–867.

  Hui, S.C.M., 2011. Green roof urban farming for buildings in high-density urban cities. The 2011 Hainan China World Green Roof Conference, March 18–21, 2011, 9 pp.

  Huisman, J. & M. Schilthuizen, 2010. Vinex-merel is andere vogel dan z’n voorvader. De Volkskrant, November 15, 2010.

  Hunter, L.M. & J.R. Krebs, 1979. Geographical variation in the song of the great tit (Parus major) in relation to ecological factors. Journal of Animal Ecology, 48: 759–785.

  Hutton, P. & K.J. McGraw, 2016. Urban impacts on oxidative balance and animal signals. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, 4: 54.

  Ibisch, P.L., M.T. Hoffmann, S. Kreft, G. Pe’er, V. Kati, L. Biber-Freudenberger, D.A. DellaSala, M.M. Vale, P.R. Hobson & N. Selva, 2016. A global map of roadless areas and their conservation status. Science, 354: 1423–1427.

  Imhoff, M.L., L. Bounoua, T. Ricketts, C. Loucks, R. Harriss & W.T. Lawrence, 2004. Global patterns in human consumption of net primary production. Nature, 429: 870–873.

  Jaganmohan, M., L.S. Vailshery & H. Nagendra, 2013. Patterns of insect abundance and distribution in urban domestic gardens in Bangalore, India. Diversity, 5: 767–778.

  Jeevanandam, N. & R.T. Corlett, 2013. Fig wasp dispersal in urban Singapore. Raffles Bulletin of Zoology, 61: 343–347.

  Jenkinson, F., 1922. Obituary. The Entomologist’s Monthly Magazine, 58: 20–22.

  Johnson, M.T.J., K.A. Thompson & H.S. Saini, 2015. Plant evolution in the urban jungle. American Journal of Botany, 102: 1951–1953.

  Johnston, M., S. Nail & S. James, 2011. “Natives versus aliens:” the relevance of the debate to urban forest management in Britain. Proceedings of the conference “Trees, People and the Built Environment,” Birmingham, UK.

  Jones, C.G., J.H. Lawton & M. Shachak, 1994. Organisms as ecosystem engineers. Oikos, 69: 373–386.

  Jones, D., 2009. Tough start builds urban survivors. Wildlife Australia, 46 (3): 43.

  Jones, J. & C.M. Francis, 2003. The effects of light characteristics on avian mortality at lighthouses. Journal of Avian Biology, 34: 328–333.

  Kaplan, S., 2016. These fish evolved to survive the most poisoned places in America. Washington Post, December 8, 2016.

  Kettlewell, H.B.D., 1955. Selection experiments on industrial melanism in the Lepidoptera. Heredity, 9: 323–342.

  Kettlewell, H.B.D., 1956. Further selection experiments on industrial melanism in the Lepidoptera. Heredity, 10: 287–301.

  Kettlewell, H.B.D., 1973. The Evolution of Melanism. Oxford: Clarendon Press. 423 pp.

  Khanna, P., 2016. Connectography: Mapping the Future of Global Civilization. Random House, 496 pp.

  Kobori, H. & R.B. Primack, 2003. Conservation for Satoyama, the traditional landscape of Japan. Arnoldia, 62 (4): 3–10.

  Kohsaka, R., W. Shih, O. Saito & S. Sadohara, 2013. Local assessment of Tokyo: Satoyama and Satoumi—traditional landscapes and management practices in a contemporary urban environment. Pp. 93–105 in: Urbanization, biodiversity and ecosystem services: Challenges and opportunities. Springer, the Netherlands.

  Kowarik, I., 2011. Novel urban ecosystems, biodiversity, and conservation. Environmental Pollution, 159: 1974–1983.

  Lampe, U., K. Reinhold & T. Schmoll, 2014. How grasshoppers respond to road noise: developmental plasticity and population differentiation in acoustic signaling. Functional Ecol
ogy, 28: 660–668.

  Lampe, U., T. Schmoll, A. Franzke & K. Reinhold, 2012. Staying tuned: grasshoppers from noisy roadside habitats produce courtship signals with elevated frequency components. Functional Ecology, 26: 1348–1354.

  Lefebvre, L., 1995. The opening of milk bottles by birds: evidence for accelerating learning rates, but against the wave-of-advance model of cultural transmission. Behavioral Processes, 34: 43–53.

  Lippens P. & H. van Hengel, 1962. De merel de laatste 150 jaar. Campina.

  Le Gros, A., S. Samadi, D. Zuccon, R. Cornette, M.P. Braun, J.C. Senar & P. Clergeau, 2016. Rapid morphological changes, admixture and invasive success in populations of Ring-necked parakeets (Psittacula krameri) established in Europe. Biological Invasions, 18: 1581–1598.

  Littleford-Colquhoun, B.L., C. Clemente, M.J. Whiting, D. Ortiz-Barrientos & C.H. Frère, 2017. Archipelagos of the Anthropocene: rapid and extensive differentiation of native terrestrial vertebrates in a single metropolis. Molecular Ecology, 26: 2466–2481.

  Lok, A.F.S.L. & T.K. Lee, 2009. Barbets of Singapore Part 2: Megalaima haemacephala indica Latham (Coppersmith barbet), Singapore’s only native, urban barbet. Nature in Singapore, 1: 47–54.

  Lok, A.F.S.L., W.F. Ang, B.Y.Q. Ng, T.M. Leong, C.K. Yeo & H.T.W. Tan, 2013. Native fig species as a keystone resource for the Singapore urban environment. Raffles Museum of Biodiversity Research, Singapore. 55 pp.

  Longcore, T. & C. Rich, 2004. Ecological light pollution. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 2: 191–198.

  Losos, J.B., 2009. Lizards in an Evolutionary Tree: Ecology and Adaptive Radiation of Anoles. Berkeley: University of California Press, 528 pp.

  Losos, J.B., K.I. Warheit & T.W. Schoener, 1997. Adaptive differentiation following experimental island colonization in Anolis lizards. Nature, 387: 70–73.

  MacArthur, R.A. & E. O. Wilson, 1967. The Theory of Island Biogeography. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 224 pp.

  Mahoney, J., 2012. Why wild animals are moving into cities, and what to do about it. Popular Science, December 19, 2012.

  Majerus, M.E.N., 1998. Melanism. Evolution in Action. Oxford, Oxford University Press, 338 pp.

 

‹ Prev