SYMP 19 - Novel Ecosystems in Cities: Adaptation to Urban Conditions

Thursday, August 11, 2016: 1:30 PM-5:00 PM
Grand Floridian Blrm B, Ft Lauderdale Convention Center
Organizer:
Rebecca W. Dolan
Co-organizers:
Michael McKinney , Madhusudan Katti and Katalin Szlavecz
Moderator:
Rebecca W. Dolan
Birds calling and communicating through the din of traffic, pollinators thriving on green roofs, trees sprouting in gutters, flowers blooming in the sidewalk crevices, and earthworms living in sewer pipes. How do they do it? Cities are understudied novel ecosystems of the Anthropocene. Distinct features of urban environments compared to non-built environments are recognized to include distinct soils and altered hydrology, impervious surfaces, heat island effects, altered disturbance regimes that often result in perpetual disequilibrium, fragmentation, light and noise pollution, increased contact with non-native species, habitat fragmentation and loss of coevolved species such as pollinators and seed dispersers. How organisms in cities are responding to these features is less well understood. There is, for example, emerging evidence that many urban ecosystems are in the process of “self-assembly”, with urban organisms rapidly adapting to each other via behavioral, physiological, and genetic mechanisms. In a sense, this is an urban version of the “invasional meltdown” of the invasion literature whereby organisms interact to create niches for themselves and other species. Perhaps this is an inevitable outcome of human activity which is largely focused on human niche creation, an activity that is perhaps most pronounced in our intensively urbanized habitats. Speakers in this symposium will address what is known, and what yet needs to be known, about 1) adaptations (i.e., genetic changes) brought about by selective forces acting specifically in urban ecosystems and 2) responses (i.e., natural/life history shifts that may or may not include adaption), such as changes in diet in response to altered resource bases, that allow living things to survive in cities.
1:30 PM
Anthropogenic resource subsidies and the domestication of urban biota
Paige S. Warren, University of Massachusetts Amherst; Jason D. Fischer, Disney’s Animals, Science, and Environment
2:00 PM Cancelled
SYMP 19-2
Animals adapting to the rhythms of city life: An evolutionary ecological perspective (widthdrawn)
Madhusudan Katti, California State University, Fresno
2:30 PM
Arachnids in a shrinking city: How spider richness and dietary niche breadth shift with vacant lot plant community structure
Mary M. Gardiner, The Ohio State University; Nicole C. Hoekstra, The Ohio State University
3:00 PM
3:10 PM
Life under the city: The decomposer community of urban soils
Katalin Szlavecz, Johns Hopkins University; Mitchell Pavao-Zuckerman, University of Maryland
See more of: Symposia