Urban-dwelling birds have the potential to serve as powerful biomonitors that reveal the impact of environmental change due to urbanization. Specifically, urban bird populations can be used to survey cities for factors that may pose both public and wildlife health concerns. Here, we review evidence supporting the use of avian biomonitors to identify threats associated with urbanization, including bioaccumulation of toxicants and the dysregulation of behavior and physiology by related stressors. In addition, we consider the use of birds to examine how factors in the urban environment can impact immunity against communicable pathogens. By studying the behavior, physiology, and ecology of urban bird populations, we can elucidate not only how a...
[EN] We human beings are becoming urban citizens. More and more people spend their lives in urban e...
Urbanization constitutes one of the major transformations of natural habitats, creating new areas ch...
As the natural habitats of many species are degraded or disappear, there is scope for these species ...
Urbanisation process is recently a wide-spread process that causes high-impact environmental transfo...
Urbanization is next to global warming the largest threat to biodiversity. Indeed, it is becoming in...
Urbanisation of natural habitats is rapidly intensifying and poses a potential global threat for wil...
With increasing urbanization and related loss of biodiversity, it has become increasingly important ...
Urbanization poses a major threat to biodiversity worldwide. We focused on birds as a well-studied t...
A large body of work over the past few decades has revealed the manifestly dramatic impacts of urban...
To meet the demands of increasing human populations, cities expand through infrastructural and housi...
By transforming landscapes, human activity creates new types of habitats with altered environmental ...
Urbanization constitutes one of the major transformations of natural habitats, creating new areas ch...
The world is urbanising rapidly, and it is predicted that by 2050, 66% of the global human populatio...
As the world urbanizes, wildlife species will be forced to adapt to changed environments to survive....
Human-induced changes to the environment represent a new set of selective pressures on wildlife that...
[EN] We human beings are becoming urban citizens. More and more people spend their lives in urban e...
Urbanization constitutes one of the major transformations of natural habitats, creating new areas ch...
As the natural habitats of many species are degraded or disappear, there is scope for these species ...
Urbanisation process is recently a wide-spread process that causes high-impact environmental transfo...
Urbanization is next to global warming the largest threat to biodiversity. Indeed, it is becoming in...
Urbanisation of natural habitats is rapidly intensifying and poses a potential global threat for wil...
With increasing urbanization and related loss of biodiversity, it has become increasingly important ...
Urbanization poses a major threat to biodiversity worldwide. We focused on birds as a well-studied t...
A large body of work over the past few decades has revealed the manifestly dramatic impacts of urban...
To meet the demands of increasing human populations, cities expand through infrastructural and housi...
By transforming landscapes, human activity creates new types of habitats with altered environmental ...
Urbanization constitutes one of the major transformations of natural habitats, creating new areas ch...
The world is urbanising rapidly, and it is predicted that by 2050, 66% of the global human populatio...
As the world urbanizes, wildlife species will be forced to adapt to changed environments to survive....
Human-induced changes to the environment represent a new set of selective pressures on wildlife that...
[EN] We human beings are becoming urban citizens. More and more people spend their lives in urban e...
Urbanization constitutes one of the major transformations of natural habitats, creating new areas ch...
As the natural habitats of many species are degraded or disappear, there is scope for these species ...