“…However, generally, these studies are mostly descriptive, and only about one third (47 out 150) addressed impacts of human‐mediated changes in diets (37% of the studies on terrestrial organisms and 22% of the studies on aquatic taxa, see Table S1). For terrestrial species, most of these studies focused on the impacts of urbanized areas (Bohmann et al, ; Coghlan et al, ; Cravens et al, ; Forin‐Wiart et al, ; Groom et al, ; Khanam, Howitt, Mushtaq, & Russell, ; Lim, Ramli, Bhassu, & Wilson, ; Quéméré et al, ; Smith, Thomas, Levi, Wang, & Wilmers, ; Sullins et al, ) and landscape changes due to agriculture (e.g., Branco et al, ; Clare et al, , ; Sugimoto et al, ) in trophic interactions. Importantly, the results obtained so far provide substantial knowledge toward effective conservation planning and management, by identifying the impacts of introduced species, both revealing competition with native fauna (Brown et al, ; Egeter, Bishop, & Robertson, ; Robeson II et al, ; Zarzoso‐Lacoste et al, ) and uncovering the importance of introduced plant species to the diet of endangered species (Ando et al, ).…”