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Animals often co-exist with humans inside buildings, however in birds such cases are only sporadically noted. In this paper we describe the occurrence of House Sparrows in supermarket interiors. The probability of House Sparrows presence was higher in larger markets and during winter period. The abundance and density of birds were positively and negatively related to the size of the supermarket, respectively. The birds were active at night. They foraged mainly along market shelves on bakery products, vegetables and cereals. We did not observe nesting inside market halls. The supermarkets seem to be hospitable wintering place for this species, however they may also be ecological traps imprisoning the birds once they find their way in. Moreover, House Sparrows may contaminate food, thus, the presence of such species inside supermarkets should be controlled.
Species that are introduced to novel environments can lose their native pathogens and parasites during the process of introduction. The escape from the negative effects associated with these natural enemies is commonly employed as an explanation for the success and expansion of invasive species, which is termed the enemy release hypothesis (ERH). In this study, nested PCR techniques and microscopy were used to determine the prevalence and intensity (respectively) of Plasmodium spp. and Haemoproteus spp. in introduced house sparrows and native urban birds of central Brazil. Generalized linear mixed models were fitted by Laplace approximation considering a binomial error distribution and logit link function. Location and species were considered as random effects and species categorization (native or non-indigenous) as fixed effects. We found that native birds from Brazil presented significantly higher parasite prevalence in accordance with the ERH. We also compared our data with the literature, and found that house sparrows native to Europe exhibited significantly higher parasite prevalence than introduced house sparrows from Brazil, which also supports the ERH. Therefore, it is possible that house sparrows from Brazil might have experienced a parasitic release during the process of introduction, which might also be related to a demographic release (e.g. release from the negative effects of parasites on host population dynamics).
This work summarizes results concerning the nest development of synanthropic birds (Tree Sparrows, House Sparrows, Great Tits, Jackdaws, House Martins) in urban environments, published to date from the research done by the author and sets them against the background of data in the field under discussion. Concentration changes in Ca, Mg, Fe, Zn, Cu, Mn, Co, Cd and Pb were different with age, depending on the health status of nestlings (healthy, sick and dead) and the species. The intensity and directions of changes in the concentrations of elements in the bodies of developing nestlings were found to be dependent on the degree of chemical contamination in the environment. During development in the nest, there was a slower rise in the concentrations of physiological elements (Ca, Mg, Fe, Zn) in the organs (liver, kidneys, lung, heart, spleen, pectoral muscles, brain, feathers, and bones: femur, patella, fibula, tibiotarsus, larsometatarsus)', of nestlings from polluted environments than in those from unpolluted ones. In turn, the concentrations of non-physiological elements (Pb, Cd) showed a greater rate of increase in nestlings from polluted areas, which were also characterized by a slower increase in biomass, with maximum mass being attained just before flight from the nest. Increased Pb and Cd concentrations were associated with impaired growth of nestlings, i.e. decreased asymptote of body masses growth. Unpolluted urban areas are characterized by greater hatching and fledging successes than the polluted ones. Chlorinated hydrocarbons can affect embryonic mortality amj may be an indirect cause of nestling death. Higher concentrations of toxic heavy metals limit the laying-down of physiological elements in nestlings, which accumulate small amounts of Pb and Cd in soft tissues and greater amounts in bones and feathers. Clutch sizes are influenced not only by concentrations (in the bodies of females) of elements important for eggs production, but also by the concentrations of toxic heavy metals in females and eggs - a factor in turn dependent on the concentrations of these metals in the environment (thereby attesting to its degree of pollution). Sparrow nestlings whose lipid content was lower than that necessary to survive the night, had lower Fe concentration in the liver compared with those with higher lipid reserves. Pb and Cd have an unfavourable impact on the lipid and protein reserves of nestlings. Urban birds can exist in their polluted environments due to a variety of adaptations.
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