The impact of urbanization on avian communities during the breeding
season in the Huanghuai Plain of China
Abstract
The noise pollution, habitat loss, and human disturbance caused by
urbanization have led to damage in bird communities. Research on the
relationship between urbanization and birds predominantly focuses on
highly urbanized areas, with few studies in underdeveloped urbanized
areas. Given the greater stability of the bird community during breeding
season, it was chosen for this study. Here, we conducted bird surveys
along the urban-rural continuum by utilizing 150 line transects within a
51385 km2 area from June to August in 2022 and 2023, aiming to explore
the impact of urbanization on bird species diversity and functional
traits during the breeding season in the Huanghuai Plain of China. We
found that species diversity and functional traits had significant
differences among three habitats (i.e., urban, suburban, and rural).
Additionally, the urbanization synthetic index had significant negative
correlations with species richness and the Shannon-Wiener index, while
having no significant correlation with functional traits. We then
assessed that the environmental noise, the distance to the county
center, and the proportion of building area within a 250-meter radius
were critical factors affecting species diversity, as well as
environmental noise and the distance to the county center being the best
predictors for functional traits. Urban birds preferred to construct
nests at crown, and the diets of them tended to be omnivorous. Our study
highlights the importance of the environmental noise, the distance to
the county center, and the building index for the protection of urban
birds in Huanghuai Plain. The research findings filled the gap in the
study area regarding the relationship between urbanization and avian
communities based on the urban-rural continuum.