Wild boar in the city: Phenotypic responses to urbanisation

Urbanisation is a global human-induced environmental change and one of the most important threats to biodiversity. To survive in human-modified environments, wildlife must adjust to the challenging selection pressures of urban areas through behaviour, morphology, physiology and/or genetic changes. H...

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Published in:The Science of the total environment Vol. 773; p. 145593
Main Authors: Castillo-Contreras, Raquel, Mentaberre, Gregorio, Fernandez Aguilar, Xavier, Conejero, Carles, Colom-Cadena, Andreu, Ráez-Bravo, Arián, González-Crespo, Carlos, Espunyes, Johan, Lavín, Santiago, López-Olvera, Jorge R.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Netherlands Elsevier B.V 15-06-2021
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Summary:Urbanisation is a global human-induced environmental change and one of the most important threats to biodiversity. To survive in human-modified environments, wildlife must adjust to the challenging selection pressures of urban areas through behaviour, morphology, physiology and/or genetic changes. Here we explore the effect of urbanisation in a large, highly adaptable and generalist urban adapter species, the wild boar (Sus scrofa, Linnaeus 1758). From 2005 to 2018, we gathered wild boar data and samples from three areas in NE Spain: one urban (Barcelona municipality, n = 445), and two non-urban (Serra de Collserola Natural Park, n = 183, and Sant Llorenç del Munt i Serra de l'Obac Natural Park, n = 54). We investigated whether urbanisation influenced wild boar body size, body mass, body condition, and the concentration of serum metabolites, considering also the effect of age, sex and use of anthropogenic food resources. Wild boars from the urban area had larger body size, higher body mass, better body condition, and a higher triglyceride and lower creatinine serum concentrations than non-urban wild boars. In addition, urban wild boars consumed food from anthropogenic origin more frequently, which suggests that differences in their diet probably induced the biometric and the metabolic changes observed. These responses are probably adaptive and suggest that wild boars are thriving in the urban environment. Our results show that urbanisation can change the morphological and physiological traits of a large mammal urban adapter, which may have consequences in the ecology and response to urban selection pressures by the species. The phenotypic plasticity shown by wild boars provides both further and new evidence on the mechanisms that allow urban adapter species of greater size to respond to urbanisation, which is expected to continue growing globally over the coming decades. [Display omitted] •Human-modified environments are an increassing selective pressure for wildlife.•We address how a large mammal urban adapter responds to the urban environment.•The urban environment changes the wild boar diet, biometric and physiological traits.•Urban wild boars show larger body size, mass and condition than non-urban ones.•Wild boars are thriving in urban areas.
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ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.145593