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Urban Socioeconomic Variation Influences the Ecology and Evolution of Trophic Interactions

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Journal Ecol Lett
Date 2024 Mar 20
PMID 38504478
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Abstract

As urbanization expands, it is becoming increasingly important to understand how anthropogenic activity is affecting ecological and evolutionary processes. Few studies have examined how human social patterns within cities can modify eco-evolutionary dynamics. We tested how socioeconomic variation corresponds with changes in trophic interactions and natural selection on prey phenotypes using the classic interaction between goldenrod gall flies (Eurosta solidaginis) and their natural enemies: birds, beetles, and parasitoid wasps. We sampled galls from 84 sites across neighbourhoods with varying socioeconomic levels, and quantified the frequency of predation/parasitism on flies and natural selection by each enemy. We found that bird predation was higher in the highest income neighbourhoods, increasing the strength of selection for smaller galls. Wasp and beetle attack, but not their strength of selection, increased in lower income neighbourhoods. We show that socioeconomic variation in cities can have strong unintended consequences for the ecology and evolution of trophic interactions.

Citing Articles

Latitudinal gradients in seed predation persist in urbanized environments.

Hargreaves A, Ensing J, Rahn O, Oliveira F, Burkiewicz J, Lafond J Nat Ecol Evol. 2024; 8(10):1897-1906.

PMID: 39237759 DOI: 10.1038/s41559-024-02504-7.