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Colourful city birds
- June 19, 2025
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Bird species that do well in urban areas are more colourful and less brown
To the point
- Successful: Birds in the city are less likely to have brown plumage, and those with colorful plumage are more common.
- Differences between city and countryside: It is usually warmer in cities, there are fewer predators, but there is more artificial light and other background colors
- Advantages: Camouflage is not as important in the city because there are fewer predators than in nature. In addition, birds in cities need darker plumage less to protect themselves from the cold.
Urban ecology is the field of research that focuses on the effects of urbanization on different organisms. For example, many studies have investigated how urban noise affects communication in birds. However, little is still known about the relationship between urbanization and plumage colour in birds.
Plumage colour serves many important functions: it can play a role in keeping an animal warm or avoid overheating (thermoregulation), in camouflage, in competitive interactions, or in mate choice. Cities tend to be warmer, have fewer predators, more artificial light and novel background colours like that of concrete and asphalt. It is therefore quite conceivable that the urban environment can affect the colour of animals.
Abundance of 1200 bird species
© MPI for Biological Intelligence/ Kaspar Delhey
The study showed that species that thrive in urban areas are less brown. 'Brown shades are more common in natural environments than in cities. We suspect that brown birds are at a disadvantage in a rather grey city. The predominant colours of a city and the lack of suitable habitats can therefore determine which bird species are successful there,' explains Kaspar Delhey, one of the two lead authors of the study.
In addition, successful urban bird species have more elaborate colours in their plumage, which is especially true for females. Cities seem to favour more colourful birds – probably because there are fewer predators in urban areas and ‘being seen’ poses a lower risk than in rural areas.
Previous studies suggested that colour diversity is lower in urban bird communities, but the team showed that the opposite is true. 'There are fewer species in urban areas than in rural areas. When we take this into account, the bird communities in cities actually have greater colour diversity,' says Juan Diego Ibáñez-Álamo, first author of the study.
The study clearly shows that successful urban birds differ in colour from those that fail to thrive in the city – urbanization and bird colouration are therefore linked. Future research will need to show whether this also holds true for other animal groups.
List of Referenes
- Juan Diego Ibáñez‐Álamo, Kaspar Delhey, Lucía Izquierdo, Mihai Valcu, Bart Kempenaers. Colourful Urban Birds: Bird Species Successful in Urban Environments Have More Elaborate Colours and Less Brown. Ecology Letters, 2025; 28 (4) DOI: 10.1111/ele.70106
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