Abstract
Urban areas are growing rapidly across the globe, and wild species are occupying this new environment. Despite offering potential resources, disparities in the urban matrix can lead to specific challenges, with pathways and resources fragmented in space and time. Urban-dwelling species would therefore benefit from learning when and where to exploit human derived food. Here, we investigate whether birds synchronize the exploitation of the most urbanized areas to match food-provisioning patterns, using the example of the popular hand-feeding of sulphur-crested cockatoos (Cacatua galerita) in Sydney, Australia. We monitored the provisioning behaviour of people via a large-scale citizen science program, and tested for synchrony with the spatial behaviour of eight birds equipped with GPS loggers. Our data show that sulphur-crested cockatoos exploited the urban environment, relying on the green areas of the city; importantly, they also visited buildings within more urbanized areas. Sulphur-crested cockatoos used urban space with specific time patterns particularly matching human recreational feeding routines, suggestive of time-place learning. We show that urban environments provide daily temporal foraging resources for which species adjust behaviorally. Thus, our data support the general claim that retaining green spaces in cities is essential to sustainable urban planning, and key to allow species to exploit the urban environment, particularly in areas of high human density. This study builds on the literature investigating human-animal interactions, expanding our understanding of animals’ exploitation of human behavior. Further research should include the impact of such interactions on urban wildlife’s fitness according to their cognitive and behavioral traits.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.