首页|Ruling the roost: Avian species reclaim urban habitat during India's COVID-19 lockdown

Ruling the roost: Avian species reclaim urban habitat during India's COVID-19 lockdown

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As we retreated to our dwellings in the "anthropause" of spring 2020, were the wildlife sightings in previously crowded spaces a reclamation of habitat, or a mere increase in detection? We leverage an increase in balcony birdwatching, a million eBird entries, and difference-in-difference techniques to test if urban avian species richness rose during India's COVID-19 lockdown. Controlling for effort, birdwatchers in the 20 most populous cities observed a 16% increase in the number of species during lockdown. While human activity stopped overnight, and noise and visual pollution decreased soon after, increased species diversity was observed 1-2 weeks later; evidence that gradual population recovery, not better detection, underlay our results. We find atrisk, and rare, species among those reclaiming cities, implying that reducing human disturbance in urban areas can protect threatened species. Increased species diversity likely derives from a reduction in noise and air pollution associated with the lockdown, implying that urban planners should consider conservation co-benefits of urban policies when designing sustainable cities.

COVID-19BiodiversityConservationIndiaWildlifeCoexistenceBIODIVERSITYCITY

Madhok, Raahil、Gulati, Sumeet

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Univ British Columbia

2022

Biological Conservation

Biological Conservation

SCI
ISSN:0006-3207
年,卷(期):2022.271
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