Anthropogenic nest material use in a global sample of birds

Catherine Sheard*, Lucy Stott, Sally E. Street, Susan D. Healy, Shoko Sugasawa, Kevin N. Lala

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

As humans increasingly modify the natural world, many animals have responded by changing their behaviour. Understanding and predicting the extent of these responses is a key step in conserving these species. For example, the tendency for some species of birds to incorporate anthropogenic items—particularly plastic material—into their nests is of increasing concern, as in some cases, this behaviour has harmful effects on adults, young and eggs. Studies of this phenomenon, however, have to date been largely limited in geographic and taxonomic scope. To investigate the global correlates of anthropogenic (including plastic) nest material use, we used Bayesian phylogenetic mixed models and a data set of recorded nest materials in 6147 species of birds. We find that, after controlling for research effort and proximity to human landscape modifications, anthropogenic nest material use is correlated with synanthropic (artificial) nesting locations, breeding environment and the number of different nest materials the species has been recorded to use. We also demonstrate that body mass, range size, conservation status and brain size do not explain variation in the recorded use of anthropogenic nest materials. These results indicate that anthropogenic materials are more likely to be included in nests when they are more readily available, as well as potentially by species that are more flexible in their nest material choice.

Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Animal Ecology
Early online date25 Mar 2024
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 25 Mar 2024

Bibliographical note

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS: We would like to thank Camille Troisi, Andrew Clark, Antonia Yovcheva and Alexis Tréboal for help with data collection; Michael Benton for feedback on early project design; and two anonymous reviewers for comments on a previous version of this manuscript.

Data Availability Statement

The data and code underlying this study can be found at https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10719750 (Sheard et al., 2024).

Keywords

  • artificial material
  • bird nests
  • conservation
  • nest material
  • plastics

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