2018
DOI: 10.1186/s40693-018-0073-x
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A citizen-based platform reveals the distribution of functional groups inside a large city from the Southern Hemisphere: e-Bird and the urban birds of Santiago (Central Chile)

Abstract: Background: Current knowledge of urban bird ecology and biodiversity relies on evidence from cities of the Northern Hemisphere, while the Southern Hemisphere is underrepresented. Santiago is a large city from South America, located in central Chile, which is both a biodiversity hotspot and an Endemic Bird Area. This work is a synthesis, which aims to provide a diversity account for Santiago, and to describe the broad geographic distribution and bird functional patterns. Methods:We synthesized a seven-year (200… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…The large scale of our analysis was only possible following successful integration of broad‐scale empirical datasets (i.e. citizen science data (Silvertown ) and remote sensing technology (Gorelick et al )), which aid our understanding of the impacts of urbanization on birds (Aronson et al , , Gutiérrez‐Tapia et al ). We acknowledge that there are biases associated with citizen science data (Uychiaoco et al , Belt and Krausman , Boakes et al ), and indeed some of these were applicable to our study.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The large scale of our analysis was only possible following successful integration of broad‐scale empirical datasets (i.e. citizen science data (Silvertown ) and remote sensing technology (Gorelick et al )), which aid our understanding of the impacts of urbanization on birds (Aronson et al , , Gutiérrez‐Tapia et al ). We acknowledge that there are biases associated with citizen science data (Uychiaoco et al , Belt and Krausman , Boakes et al ), and indeed some of these were applicable to our study.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…2018), distribution of functional groups in urban areas (Gutiérrez‐Tapia et al . 2018), wintering range of a North American migrant (Klipp et al . 2018), migratory pathways (Pollack‐Velásquez et al .…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Diet breadth is one of the most important traits affected by urbanization [44,45]. Bird species that feed on fruits and grains tend to increase in numbers in urbanized areas as compared to insectivorous species [37,46,47]. This might be because cities have a substantial proportion of fruiting trees [48].…”
Section: Diet Breadthmentioning
confidence: 99%