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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Big city life: carnivores in urban environments

TLDR
In a time of massive environmental change across the globe, the continuing encroachment of urbanization upon wilderness areas is substantially reducing the availability of natural habitats for many species; therefore, understanding the biology of any taxon that is able to adapt to and exploit anthropogenically disturbed systems must aid us in both controlling and developing suitable conservation measures for the future of such species.
Abstract
Cities may represent one of the most challenging environments for carnivorous mammals. For example, cities have a dearth of vegetation and other natural resources, coupled with increased habitat fragmentation and an abundance of roads as well as altered climate (e.g. temperature, light, rainfall and water runoff). It is therefore intriguing that several carnivore species have become established in cities across the globe. Medium-sized carnivores such as the red fox, coyote, Eurasian badger and raccoon not only survive in cities but also have managed to exploit anthropogenic food sources and shelter to their significant advantage, achieving higher population densities than are found under natural conditions. In addition, although they may not live permanently within cities, even large carnivores such as bears, wolves and hyaenas derive significant benefit from living adjacent to urbanized areas. In this review, we examine the history of urban adaptation by mammalian carnivores, explore where they are living, what they eat, what kills them and the behavioural consequences of living in urban areas. We review the biology of urban carnivores, exploring traits such as body size and dietary flexibility. Finally, we consider the consequences of having populations of carnivores in urbanized areas, both for humans and for these charismatic mammals. In conclusion, in a time of massive environmental change across the globe, the continuing encroachment of urbanization upon wilderness areas is substantially reducing the availability of natural habitats for many species; therefore, understanding the biology of any taxon that is able to adapt to and exploit anthropogenically disturbed systems must aid us in both controlling and developing suitable conservation measures for the future of such species.

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Human–wildlife interactions in urban areas: a review of conflicts, benefits and opportunities

TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on the type and nature of human-wildlife interactions within urban environments, to help manage, mitigate or even promote these interactions, and the benefits of these interactions are becoming increasingly recognized, despite being harder to quantify and generalise.

Society for the prevention of cruelty to animals

TL;DR: Community cats serve a purpose in the location that they are in; that they remain in the vicinity does prevent a new colony from taking over, and all that the animal welfare groups ask of the general public is that community animals and people try to co-exist in the same space.
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Is the loss of Australian digging mammals contributing to a deterioration in ecosystem function

TL;DR: It is proposed that the loss of digging mammals has contributed to the deteriora- tion of ecosystems in Australia.
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Mesopredator spatial and temporal responses to large predators and human development in the Santa Cruz Mountains of California

TL;DR: It is found that higher residential development reduced puma occupancy but was not related to the occupancy of mesopredators, and species altered their activities temporally in locations with higher human use, with pumas, bobcats and coyotes reducing diurnal activities and increasing nocturnal ones.
References
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Book

The Ecological Implications of Body Size

TL;DR: In this paper, a philosophical introduction is given to logarithms, power curves, and correlations, and a mathematical primer: logarsithm, power curve and correlations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Urbanization, Biodiversity, and Conservation

Michael L. McKinney
- 01 Oct 2002 - 
TL;DR: A review by Czech and colleagues (2000) finds that urbanization endangers more species and is more geographically ubiquitous in the mainland United States than any other human activity, emphasizing the uniquely far-reaching transformations that accompany urban sprawl as discussed by the authors.
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Urbanization as a major cause of biotic homogenization

TL;DR: In this paper, a basic conservation challenge is that urban biota is often quite diverse and very abundant, and that, because so many urban species are immigrants adapting to city habitats, urbanites of all income levels become increasingly disconnected from local indigenous species and their natural ecosystems.
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Community ecology theory as a framework for biological invasions

TL;DR: The concept of "niche opportunity" was introduced by as discussed by the authors, which defines conditions that promote invasions in terms of resources, natural enemies, the physical environment, interactions between these factors, and the manner in which they vary in time and space.
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Edge Effects and the Extinction of Populations Inside Protected Areas

TL;DR: The species most likely to disappear from small reserves are those that range widely-and are therefore most exposed to threats on reserve borders-irrespective of population size, so that border areas represent population sinks.