Climate alteration is one of the most cited ecological consequences of urbanization. However, the magnitude of this impact is likely to vary with spatial scale. We investigated how this alteration affects the biological fitness of insects, which are especially sensitive to ambient conditions and well-suited organisms to study urbanization-related changes in phenotypic traits. We monitored temperature and relative air humidity in wooded sites characterized by different levels of urbanization in the surroundings. Using a split-brood design experiment, we investigated the effect of urbanization at the local (i.e., 200 × 200 m) and landscape (i.e., 3 × 3 km) scale on two key traits of biological fitness in two closely related butterfly species ...
The rapidly increasing rate of urbanization has a major impact on the ecology and evolution of speci...
1. Urbanisation, as an unstoppable global phenomenon, has led to decreasing connectivity between hab...
More than 50% of the global human population lives in urban settings, which, for urban agglomeration...
Climate alteration is one of the most cited ecological consequences of urbanization. However, the ma...
Urbanization is associated with a range of biological stressors, including increased local temperatu...
Urbanization alters environmental conditions in multiple ways and offers an ecological or evolutiona...
The rapidly increasing rate of urbanization has a major impact on the ecology and evolution of speci...
Urbanization involves a cocktail of human‐induced rapid environmental changes and is forecasted to g...
Abstract Aim: We test whether urbanization drives biotic homogenization. We hypothesize that declin...
Local community structure is shaped by processes acting at local and landscape scales. The relative ...
Urbanization and global climate change can profoundly alter biological systems, yet scientists often...
Local community structure is shaped by processes acting at local and landscape scales. The relative...
Many species are currently adapting to cities at different latitudes. Adaptation to urbanization may...
Aim We test whether urbanisation drives biotic homogenisation. We hypothesise that declines in abund...
abstract: In recent years, ecologists have begun to study the effects of urbanization on species div...
The rapidly increasing rate of urbanization has a major impact on the ecology and evolution of speci...
1. Urbanisation, as an unstoppable global phenomenon, has led to decreasing connectivity between hab...
More than 50% of the global human population lives in urban settings, which, for urban agglomeration...
Climate alteration is one of the most cited ecological consequences of urbanization. However, the ma...
Urbanization is associated with a range of biological stressors, including increased local temperatu...
Urbanization alters environmental conditions in multiple ways and offers an ecological or evolutiona...
The rapidly increasing rate of urbanization has a major impact on the ecology and evolution of speci...
Urbanization involves a cocktail of human‐induced rapid environmental changes and is forecasted to g...
Abstract Aim: We test whether urbanization drives biotic homogenization. We hypothesize that declin...
Local community structure is shaped by processes acting at local and landscape scales. The relative ...
Urbanization and global climate change can profoundly alter biological systems, yet scientists often...
Local community structure is shaped by processes acting at local and landscape scales. The relative...
Many species are currently adapting to cities at different latitudes. Adaptation to urbanization may...
Aim We test whether urbanisation drives biotic homogenisation. We hypothesise that declines in abund...
abstract: In recent years, ecologists have begun to study the effects of urbanization on species div...
The rapidly increasing rate of urbanization has a major impact on the ecology and evolution of speci...
1. Urbanisation, as an unstoppable global phenomenon, has led to decreasing connectivity between hab...
More than 50% of the global human population lives in urban settings, which, for urban agglomeration...