# Site‐Specific Impacts of Urbanisation on Annual Survival of a Forest Bird

**Authors:** Boglárka Bukor, Brett K. Sandercock, Karl L. Evans, Ivett Pipoly, Krisztina Sándor, András Liker, Gábor Seress

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/ece3.71140 · Ecology and Evolution · 2025-05-11

## TL;DR

Urbanization affects bird survival differently across locations, with some urban areas showing higher survival than forests.

## Contribution

The study reveals site-specific and age-related survival differences in urban versus forest habitats of great tits.

## Key findings

- Apparent survival of great tits varied significantly between urban and forest sites.
- Age had a stronger impact on survival in urban habitats compared to forest habitats.
- Inter-annual survival variation was not consistent across sites, suggesting local factors drive survival differences.

## Abstract

Habitat changes associated with urbanization have major and complex effects on wildlife. In birds, urban populations often have lower reproductive success but are able to maintain similar or higher densities than non‐urban populations. One explanation proposed for this paradox is that higher survival of birds in cities may compensate for lower reproduction. We use a 9‐year dataset and Cormack‐Jolly‐Seber models to compare annual variation in apparent survival probabilities of adult great tits (Parus major) at two forests and two urban sites located in Hungary. Our analyses tested the effects of sex, age, year, population density on apparent survival, after correcting for the probability of detection. Apparent survival of great tits varied between 0.122 and 0.736, with study site and year having the greatest influence. Unexpectedly, urbanization did not have a consistent effect: the sites with the lowest and highest estimates of survival were both urban habitats. Survival probabilities at the two forest sites were similar to each other but were ~0.15 lower than survival in the best urban site and ~0.1. higher than survival in the worst urban site. Survival probabilities exhibited marked inter‐annual variation in all sites, although temporal patterns were not consistent among sites suggesting the variation was not driven by inter‐annual variation in regional scale factors. Survival probabilities decreased with bird age at both urban sites in most years, but such patterns were not detected at forest sites. Our results demonstrate that the impacts of aging on avian survival rates can diverge between urban and forest habitats, and that the demographic factors regulating urban populations can vary between locations. Age‐specific variation should be taken into account in urban ecology and further exploration of the factors driving the heterogeneity will help inform conservation of biodiversity along rural‐urban gradients.

We used a long‐term dataset to estimate the apparent annual survival probabilities of adult great tits (
Parus major
) in two urban and two forest breeding habitats. Our CJS models showed the highest survival in one urban site and the lowest in the other urban site, while the two forest sites were in between the two during the study years. The age of the birds affects survival in the two urban sites, but not in the two forest sites.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Parus major (taxon 9157)

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Parus major (Great Tit, species) [taxon 9157]

## Full text

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## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12066808/full.md

## References

108 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12066808/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12066808