Exotic trees affect breeding success of UK birds

As today (14 February) marks the start of National Nest Box Week, organised by the British Trust for Ornithology, research by scientists at Anglia Ruskin University has shown that the presence of exotic, non-native trees and shrubs is having a negative impact on blue tit and great tit populations in British parks.

A collaboration between Anglia Ruskin and the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology has seen scientists compare the success of birds breeding in nest boxes in city parks to those breeding in nest boxes in traditional woodland and hedgerows.

Dr Nancy Harrison, Senior Lecturer in Life Sciences at Anglia Ruskin, led a team monitoring nest boxes in the Botanic Garden in Cambridge.  The team recorded clutch size, chick weights and fledging success, as well as the energy expended by breeding adults to establish the birds’ field metabolism.

Their research found that blue tits and great tits have more difficulty raising chicks in a man-made environment such as the Botanic Garden.  Dr Harrison’s colleague, Dr Julia Mackenzie, found that very few great tits raise chicks to fledging in the Cambridge University Botanic Garden, and these are often underweight, with an uncertain future.

Both the larger physical gaps between trees and also ‘functional’ gaps in the form of exotic trees and shrubs, which offer little reward for birds foraging for food, meant that the city dwellers had a much lower breeding success, despite working harder, than the birds living in natural woodland.

Exotic trees perhaps appear to represent a greater challenge for the birds than locations with no trees at all.  One reason could be that birds are not making the right decisions in a mosaic of exotic trees and shrubs, spending time searching for food in the wrong places.

The average weight of an 11-day-old great tit in the Botanic Garden was 14.5g compared to 17.5g for nestlings of the same age in woodland habitats, while 11-day-old blue tits averaged 9.0g compared to 10.6g in a woodland environment.

Dr Harrison said: “Our research in the Botanic Garden has shown how difficult it is for insectivorous birds like blue tits and great tits to breed in urban parks full of exotic trees and shrubs.  These birds do best when breeding in deciduous oak woodland and therefore the Botanic Garden is something of an unnatural habitat for woodland birds. 

“The birds in our cities live longer because we feed them, but they struggle to breed and raise fewer chicks.  As a result more of the birds breeding in Cambridge are older, mature individuals.

“Nest boxes with breeding blue tits and great tits bring people a lot of pleasure, and gardens and public green spaces are important for our well being in urban and suburban environments.

“Our research shows that even very small spaces can become hotspots for birds, but for an urban habitat to support wild birds we need to protect our mature, native trees, limit the number of exotic species that are planted and not insist on keeping gardens perfectly manicured.”

Image:  An 11-day-old great tit chick in the Botanic Garden (left) weighed just 8g compared to (right) an 18g 11-day-old chick at Wicken Fen in Cambridgeshire (an area with more indigenous vegetation). 

 
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For more press information please contact:

Jon Green on t: 0845 196 4717, e: jon.green@anglia.ac.uk

Andrea Hilliard on t: 0845 196 4727, e: andrea.hilliard@anglia.ac.uk
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