Darwin Comes to Town

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Darwin Comes to Town Page 26

by Menno Schilthuizen


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  Ward, P., 1968. Origin of the avifauna of urban and suburban Singapore. The Ibis, 110: 239–255.

  Warren, P.S., M. Katti, M. Erdmann & A. Brazel, 2006. Urban acoustics: it’s not just noise. Animal Behaviour, 71: 491–502.

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  Whitehead, A., W. Pilcher, D. Champlin & D. Nacci, 2011. Common mechanism underlies repeated evolution of extreme pollution tolerance. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: rspb20110847.

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  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  First of all, I must thank Peter Tallack and the other people at the Science Factory (Louisa Pritchard and Tisse Takagi), for believing in the book and finding a home for it, and editor Richard Milner at Quercus, and James Meader at Picador, for guiding me through the production process.

  My friend and colleague Satoshi Chiba kindly arranged for me to come on a two-months’ writing retreat at Tōhoku University in Sendai, Japan, which made it possible to finish the final third of the book in a tranquil and beautiful environment (and which explains the distinctly Japanese flavor of that part of the book). I thank him, his family, his students, and Naito Hiroko for creating such a welcoming atmosphere and for taking my mind off writing by organizing regular caving and other field trips. Suzanne Williams, Ellinor Michel, and Jon Ablett of the Natural History Museum, London, hosted me twice for one week of blissful writing, which effectively took place in the Mollusca department, the NHM restaurant, the Victoria & Albert Museum restaurant, the British Library, Lea Banwell’s Bed & Breakfast, and the South Kensington Pret a Manger. Other places that provided, either wittingly or unwittingly, a cushioned writing environment, were, in no particular order, Maliau Basin Studies Center in Malaysian Borneo, Düsseldorf Airport, Hotel Čertousy in Prague, the Ouibus between Paris and Amsterdam, Darko Jesic’s Paris apartment, the Groningen University’s field center in Schiermonnikoog (“De Herdershut”), Willer highway express bus between Tokyo and Sendai, Flight SQ323 of Singapore Airlines, Ahbam’s homestay in Sukau, and the Nexus Karambunai hotel lobby in Kota Kinabalu.

  Many scientists and other knowledgeable persons answered questions, proofread bits of text, or supplied me with photos or research materials. I am grateful to: Néstor Alirio, Jacques van Alphen, Florian Altermatt, Garry Bakker, Olga Barbosa, Lin Op de Beeck, Herman Berkhoudt, Pierre-Paul Bitton, Edwin Brosens, Scott Carroll, Jason Chapman, Marion Chatelain, Pierre-Olivier Cheptou, Kayla Coldsnow, Julien Cucherousset, Curt Daehler, Cat Davidson, Luis Fernando De León, Thom van Dooren, Stephanie Doucet, Meghan Duffy, Janko Duinker, Naim Edwards, Clinton Francis, Max Galka, Kevin Gaston, József Geml, Wouter Halfwerk, Adam Hart, Axel Hochkirch, Bert Hölldobler, Wendy Jesse, Marc Johnson, Masakado Kawata, Gail Kuhnlein, Kate Kuykendall, Ariane Le Gros, Isabel López-Rull, Suzanne MacDonald, Emma Marris, Bennie Meek, Martin Melchers, Osamu Mikami, Erik van Nieukerken, Joe Parker, Jesko Partecke, Carmen Paz, Norbert Peeters, Paloma Plant, Lidy Poot, Alexander Reeuwijk, David Rentz, Jelle Reumer, Ignacio Ribera, Erwin Ripmeester, Milena Salgado-Lynn, Eric Sanderson, Frédéric Santoul, Juan Carlos Senar, Laurel Serieys, Frédérique Soulard, Kamiel Spoelstra, Danica Stark, Monserrat Suárez-Rodriguez, Stephen Sutton, Matt Symonds, Etsuro Takagi, Tan Siong Kiat, Piotr Tryjanowski, Nedim Tüzün, Geerat Vermeij, Oscar Vorst, Gijsbert Werner, Thomas Wesener, Monica Wesseling, Kristin Winchell, John van Wyhe, Bakhtiar Effendi Yahya, and Pamela Yeh.

  Several colleagues invested considerably more time by letting me interview them in person or over Skype, or by engaging in lengthy email correspondence. These were Marina Alberti, Jean-Nicolas Audet, Laurence Cook, Karl Evans, Tetsuro Hosaka, Kees Moeliker, Jason Munshi-South, Shinya Numata, Laurel Serieys, Hans Slabbekoorn, Andrew Whitehead, and Niels de Zwarte.

  Throughout this book project, friends and colleagues regularly sent me bits of news, social media posts, and scientific papers on urban evolution. Particularly active were Aglaia Bouma, Bronwen Scott, and Rutger Vos, but I also received valuable tips from Thijmen Breeschoten, Tom Van Dooren, Barbara Gravendeel, Marco Roos, and Martin Rücklin. Other sources I would like to acknowledge for their help are the library of Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Wikipedia and its wikipedians, all the readers of my New York Times article who contacted me (and especially Michael McGuire and Barbara Waugh), the Rotterdam Natural History Museum, and my students at the Leiden University MSc-course Orientation in Biodiversity and Conservation.

  Minoru Chiba and Yawara Takeda took us on a trip through Sendai to find nutcracker-crows. My daughter Fenna Schilthuizen g
oaded me through Roppongi Hills in Tokyo. Chan Sow-Yan guided me on a voyage through the urban nature of Singapore. Sabine Rietkerk corresponded with me on the whereabouts and fate of the Hoek van Holland house crows.

  Auke-Florian Hiemstra’s pep-talk gave me the courage to drag myself through the final days of working on the book.

  Three people very close to me were willing to proofread the entire manuscript as it matured. These were Aglaia Bouma, Iva Njunjić and Frank van Rooij, and I am immensely grateful to them for their time, understanding, and clever comments.

  Finally, while many people helped me with proofreading and catching errors, I take responsibility for the final content of the text, and the interpretations of research results.

  INDEX

  The index that appeared in the print version of this title does not match the pages in your eBook. Please use the search function on your eReading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.

  accumulation curve

  acorn ant

  acoustic ecology

  Adams, Douglas

  adaptation

  adaptive radiation

  agriculture. See also urban agriculture

  Ahern, Michael James

  AHR (aryl hydrocarbon receptor)

  ALAN. See Artificial Light At Night

  Alberti, Marina

  Albi, France

  Al-Hiyali, Sedik

  alligator

  Altermatt, Florian

  Ambasz, Emilio

  American Acclimatization Society

  American black cherry

  American cliff swallow

  American redstart

  Amsterdam

  Amsterdam Wildlife (film)

  annulet moth

  Anolis lizard

  anthropophiles

  ants

  Aplin, Lucy

  apple maggot fly

  architecture

  arthopods

  Artificial Light At Night (ALAN)

  Attenborough, Sir David

  Audet, Jean-Nicolas

  Australia

  Australian brush-turkey

  azure damselfly

  balloon vine

  Baltimore

  Bamberg, Germany

  Bangalore

  Barbados

  Barbosa, Olga

  Barcelona

  Basel

  bass

  bats

  beak shape

  beaver

  Becker, Ute

  bed bug

  beetles

  Amphotis marginata

  brown cloud

  clown

  ditto rove

  jewel

  leaf

  rhinoceros 193–94

  rove

  water

  behaviour

  Beijing

  Belles de Bitume

  Berlin

  Bialystock, Poland

  Biobank

  Bioblitz

  biodiversity

  biological clock

  biome

  bird calls

  birds

  bird song

  Birmingham

  Bitton, Pierre-Paul

  blackbird

  blackcaps

  Block Island

  blue tit. See tit, blue

  bobcat

  Boeri, Stefano

  Bomberger-Brown, Mary

  Bonaparte, Charles Lucien

  Borneo

  Bosco Verticale

  bowerbird, satin

  Bracknell, Britain

  Bridgeport, Connecticut

  bridge spider

  Bridgetown, Barbados

  Brisbane

  Brook, Barry

  broom

  Brown, Charles

  Brussels

  BUGS project

  bulbul

  bullfinch

  butterflies

  Byrne, Katharine

  Cadbury Bird Preserve

  camouflage

  Caribbean

  carrion crow

  Carroll, Scott

  cars

  Carson, Rachel

  catfish

  cat’s ear

  cellar spider

  Chandler, Tony

  Chan Sow-Yan

  Chatelain, Marion

  Cheptou, Pierre-Olivier

  Chiba, Minoru

  Chicago

  chickadees

  chiffchaff

  Chile

  China

  Chocholoušková, Zdena

  Chongqing

  Christmas Bird Count

  chromosomes

  chuckwalla

  cichlid fish

  cigarettes

  citizen science

  City Nature Challenge

  Claviger testaceus

  Cody, Martin

  Coldsnow, Kayla

  color. See industrial melanism; melanism

  common garden experiments

  community initiatives

  copper

  cordgrass

  corn

  corn borer

  corridors

  cortex gene

  corticosterone

  courtship

  Coyne, Jerry

  coyote

  creationism

  cricket

  crocodile

  crow

  carrion

  nutcracker

  Cucherousset, Julien

  cuckoo

  culture (of animals). See learning

  Daehler, Curtis

  damselflies

  Daphnia

  dark-eyed junco

  darwin (measure of evolutionary speed)

  Darwin, Charles

  Darwin Correspondence Project

  darwinian architecture

  Darwin’s finches

  DDT

  De Léon, Luis Fernando

  detoxification

  development

  Diamond, Sarah

  diatom alga

  disease

  display (behavior)

  DNA

  DNA markers

  domestication

  Dooren, Thom van

  Dorset

  dove

  Ducatez, Simon

  eagle

  ecology

  ecosystem

  ecosystem engineers

  Edleston, R.S.

  Egypt

  Eisenbeis, Gerhard

  Elton, Charles

  embryo development

  epigenetics

  Erlanger, Germany

  estrogen

  Evans, Karl

  evolution

  human

  rapid

  speed of

  urban

  evolutionary cyle

  evolutionary trap

  EvoScope

  exotic species

  extinction

  Farn, Albert Brydges

  feathers

  fern

  FID. See Flight Initiation Distance

  finches. See also Darwin’s finches; house finches

  Fisher, James

  Fisher, Ronald

  fishes

  fleas

  flies

  flight endurance

  Flight Initiation Distance (FID)

  Florida

  Florizoone, Guy

  flycatchers

  food webs

  football

  Ford, E.B. “Henry”

  Formica rufa

  Fortaleza, Brazil

  foxes

  fragmentation (of habitat)

  Francis, Clinton

  freshwater

  frogs

  Fukuda, Mitsuhisa

  Fukuoka, Japan

  fungi

  Funky Nest Contest

  Galápagos

  garden privet

  gardens, urban 58–61

  rooftop

  underground

  vertical

  Gaston, Kevin

&nbs
p; gecko

  Gehrt, Stanley

  gene

  switching on

  gene pool

  genetic code

  genetic drift

  genetic signature

  genetic structure

  genetic variation, standing

  genome

  gerbil

  global homogenization

  Global Urban Soil Ecology and Education Network (GLUSEEN)

  godwit

  Graham, Brendan

  grasses

  grasshoppers

  gray squirrel. See squirrel, gray

  great tit. See tit, great

  green roofs

  greenways

  grouse

  Haldane, J.B.S.

  Halfwerk, Wouter

  hard selection. See selection

  Harris, Stephen

  Hart, Adam

  hawk

  hawksbeard

  heat island. See urban heat island

  heavy metals

  hedgehog

  Heiling, Astrid

  Henslow, John Stevens

  herbivores

  highways

  Hinde, Robert

  HIREC. See Human-Induced Rapid Evolutionary Change

  Hölldobler, Bert

  honest signaling

  Hong Kong

  Hooper, Judith

  hormones

  Hosaka, Tetsuro

  house crow

  house finch

  house sparrow

  Hudson, Henry

  Huisman, Jef

  human-engineered ecosystem

  Human-Induced Rapid Evolutionary Change (HIREC)

  human population history

  hummingbird

  Hunter, Cornelius

  iguana

  immunity

  impervious surfaces

  inbreeding

  incubator bird

  India

  industrial melanism

  insecticides and pesticides

  insects

  introduced species

  invasive species

  island biogeography

  isolation

  ivy

  jackdaws

  Jacquin, Lisa

  Japan

  Japanese knotweed

  jays

  jet ant

  jewel beetle

  Jones, Clive

  Jones, Darryl

  junko. See dark-eyed junko

  Kettlewell, Bernard

  Kettlewell, Hazel

  Khanna, Parag

  Lagos

  Lampe, Ulrike

  Lawton, John

  lead

  leaf beetle

  learning

  Le Gros, Ariane

  Leicester

  Leiden

  Leipzig

  Life of Birds, The (BBC series)

  light (artificial)

  limb shape

 

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