Urban blackbirds have shorter telomeres
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Publication date
2018
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Publisher
The Royal Society
Citation
Ibáñez-Álamo, J. D., Pineda-Pampliega, J., Thomson, R. L., Aguirre, J. I., Díez-Fernández, A., Faivre, B., Figuerola, J., & Verhulst, S. (2018). Urban blackbirds have shorter telomeres. Biology Letters, 14(3). https://doi.org/10.1098/RSBL.2018.0083
Abstract
Urbanization, one of the most extreme human-induced environmental changes, represents a major challenge for many organisms. Anthropogenic habitats can have opposing effects on different fitness components, for example, by decreasing starvation risk but also health status. Assessment of the net fitness effect of anthropogenic habitats is therefore difficult. Telomere length is associated with phenotypic quality and mortality rate in many species, and the rate of telomere shortening is considered an integrative measure of the ‘life stress’ experienced by an individual. This makes telomere length a promising candidate for examining the effects of urbanization on the health status of individuals. We investigated whether telomere length differed between urban and forest-dwelling common blackbirds (Turdus merula). Using the terminal restriction fragment assay, we analysed telomere length in yearlings and older adults from five population dyads (urban versus forest) across Europe. In both age classes, urban blackbirds had significantly shorter telomeres (547 bp) than blackbirds in natural habitats, indicating lower health status in urban blackbirds. We propose several potential hypotheses to explain our results. Our findings show that even successful city dwellers such as blackbirds pay a price for living in these anthropogenic habitats.
Description
J.D.I. was funded by a postdoctoral contract (TAHUB-104) from the program ‘Andalucía Talent Hub’ (Marie Skłodowska-Curie actions—COFUND). A.D. was funded by the ‘Severo Ochoa’ program from MICINN (Spain). J.P. was funded by a grant from the Universidad Complutense de Madrid (CT45/15-CT46/15).











