Abstract
The effects of growing urbanization have caused an increase in human-wildlife interactions in urban areas. Human-gull conflicts have been particularly studied during the breeding season when gulls cause an obvious nuisance in urban areas. However, with many gulls being present in urban areas throughout the year, stakeholders need knowledge of seasonal effects on local human-gull interaction dynamics. Here we present a comprehensive study on spatial and temporal variation of urban habitat use and human interactions with urban gulls, Larus spp., in Porto, Portugal. The work combined: (1) a large-scale study, using year-round monthly surveys to quantify gulls’ behaviour and their use of multiple urban habitats, with (2) a small-scale study, using 10-h daily urban surveys to capture gulls’ daily routines and interactions with humans during the winter and breeding seasons. We found a strong temporal effect in the number of gulls and human-gull interactions occurring in urban areas, with both highly increasing during winter. Habitats with higher urbanization intensity were mainly used by adult gulls, and the number of breeding-related conflicts reported by the human population peaked during the chick-rearing period. Still, during winter, several adult gulls kept occupying their rooftop nesting grounds, and the number of individuals foraging and interacting with humans in city-squares increased. This was mostly triggered by humans feeding birds. Therefore, when designing urban management landscape measures, seasonal variations of the urban gulls’ behaviour and habitat-use should be considered, as well as anthropogenic activities and human behaviour.
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Acknowledgments
The authors are thankful to Via Catarina Shopping Centre administration and staff to allow the development of part of the practical work by giving access to specific parts of the building. The authors also would like to acknowledge Dr. António Tavares, Executive Director of the Clérigos Tower, for giving access to the tower for the monthly surveys.
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Data and materials are available from the corresponding authors upon request. All fieldwork and data collection were performed following national and international ethics laws.
Funding
This work is financed by national funds through FCT - Foundation for Science and Technology, I.P., within the scope of the projects UIDB/04292/2020 – MARE - Marine and Environmental Sciences Centre and UID/AMB/50017/2019 - CESAM - Centre for Environmental and Marine Studies. Joana Pais de Faria thanks FCT for the financial support provided through the doctoral grant SFRH/BD/118861/2016 funded by European Social Fund (FSE) and national governmental funding programmes. Ana M. M. Gonçalves acknowledges University of Coimbra for the contract IT057–18-7253.
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Joana PAIS DE FARIA (JPF), Vitor H. PAIVA (VHP), Sara Veríssimo (SV), Ana M. M. GONÇALVES (AMMG) and Jaime A. RAMOS (JAR) were responsible for the study conception and design. JPF and SV contributed for the data collection, JPF performed the data analysis and wrote the first manuscript draft. All authors commented on previous versions and approved the final manuscript. The authors declare no competing interests and give full consent for publication to Urban Ecosystems.
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Pais de Faria, J., Paiva, V.H., Veríssimo, S. et al. Seasonal variation in habitat use, daily routines and interactions with humans by urban-dwelling gulls. Urban Ecosyst 24, 1101–1115 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11252-021-01101-x
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11252-021-01101-x