Behavioral studies are fundamental to understanding how animal populations face global change. Although much research has centered upon the idea that individuals can adaptively modify their behaviors to cope with environmental changes, recent evidence supports the existence of individual differences in suites of correlated behaviors. However, little is known about how selection can change these behavioral structures in populations subject to different environmental constraints. The colonization of urban environments by birds has been related to their inter-individual variability in their fear of humans, measured as their flight initiation distance to an approaching human, such that urban life would select for fearless individuals. T...
There is a growing need to understand how species respond to habitat changes and the potential key r...
, with “tame” individuals invading urban habitats and other individuals rema...
Animals in urban habitats face many novel selection pressures such as increased human population den...
Birds exhibit variation in fear behaviour in response to an approaching human within and between spe...
Human-induced rapid environmental changes challenge individuals by creating evolutionarily novel sce...
Flight initiation distance (FID), a measure of an animal's tolerance to human disturbance and a desc...
Dispersal propensity has been correlated with personality traits, conspecific density and predation ...
Urbanization creates novel environments for wild animals where selection pressures may differ drasti...
BACKGROUND: Urbanization is the most prevailing cause of habitat transformation worldwide, differing...
As the natural habitats of many species are degraded or disappear, there is scope for these species ...
Urban endocrine ecology aims to understand how organisms cope with new sources of stress and maintai...
Background: Urbanization is the most prevailing cause of habitat transformation worldwide, differing...
Urban areas expose wildlife to an array of novel predators, amongst which, humans and dogs are highl...
The extent to which animals respond fearfully to novel stimuli may critically influence their abilit...
Behavioral adjustment is a key factor that facilitates species’ coexistence with humans in a rapidl...
There is a growing need to understand how species respond to habitat changes and the potential key r...
, with “tame” individuals invading urban habitats and other individuals rema...
Animals in urban habitats face many novel selection pressures such as increased human population den...
Birds exhibit variation in fear behaviour in response to an approaching human within and between spe...
Human-induced rapid environmental changes challenge individuals by creating evolutionarily novel sce...
Flight initiation distance (FID), a measure of an animal's tolerance to human disturbance and a desc...
Dispersal propensity has been correlated with personality traits, conspecific density and predation ...
Urbanization creates novel environments for wild animals where selection pressures may differ drasti...
BACKGROUND: Urbanization is the most prevailing cause of habitat transformation worldwide, differing...
As the natural habitats of many species are degraded or disappear, there is scope for these species ...
Urban endocrine ecology aims to understand how organisms cope with new sources of stress and maintai...
Background: Urbanization is the most prevailing cause of habitat transformation worldwide, differing...
Urban areas expose wildlife to an array of novel predators, amongst which, humans and dogs are highl...
The extent to which animals respond fearfully to novel stimuli may critically influence their abilit...
Behavioral adjustment is a key factor that facilitates species’ coexistence with humans in a rapidl...
There is a growing need to understand how species respond to habitat changes and the potential key r...
, with “tame” individuals invading urban habitats and other individuals rema...
Animals in urban habitats face many novel selection pressures such as increased human population den...