Novel Foraging Behaviors of an Urban Bird, the Light‐Vented Bulbul (Pycnonotus sinensis)
Yuxin Li, Sidan Lin, Wei Liang

TL;DR
This paper describes two new foraging behaviors in Light-vented Bulbuls in urban areas, offering insights into how birds adapt to city life.
Contribution
The study reports previously undocumented foraging behaviors in an urban bird species.
Findings
Light-vented Bulbuls forage on tree trunks in a woodpecker-like manner to catch insects.
They also forage on insect aggregations under artificial light at night.
These behaviors are currently observed in only a few individuals.
Abstract
Urban environments expose animals to the situation with a greater diversity of novel stimuli, often promoting the emergence of innovative behaviors. Such behavioral plasticity is considered a key strategy that aids birds in adjusting to urbanization. Identifying cases of behavioral innovation across different species and behavioral contexts is crucial for understanding the ways in which birds adapt to urban environments. This study reports two novel foraging behaviors observed in the Light‐vented Bulbul ( Pycnonotus sinensis ), a common urban bird in southern China. In the first case, Light‐vented Bulbuls were observed foraging on tree trunks in a woodpecker‐like manner to capture insects; in the second case, Light‐vented Bulbuls foraged on insect aggregations under artificial light at night. However, these behaviors have currently been observed only in a small number of individuals. It…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAvian ecology and behavior · Animal Behavior and Reproduction · Animal Ecology and Behavior Studies
