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      Risk-sensitive learning is a winning strategy for leading an urban invasion

      research-article
      1 , , 2 , 3 ,
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      eLife
      eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd
      dispersal, cognition, rapid range expansion, reinforcement learning, sex differences, great-tailed grackles, Other

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          Abstract

          In the unpredictable Anthropocene, a particularly pressing open question is how certain species invade urban environments. Sex-biased dispersal and learning arguably influence movement ecology, but their joint influence remains unexplored empirically, and might vary by space and time. We assayed reinforcement learning in wild-caught, temporarily captive core-, middle-, or edge-range great-tailed grackles—a bird species undergoing urban-tracking rapid range expansion, led by dispersing males. We show, across populations, both sexes initially perform similarly when learning stimulus-reward pairings, but, when reward contingencies reverse, male—versus female—grackles finish ‘relearning’ faster, making fewer choice-option switches. How do male grackles do this? Bayesian cognitive modelling revealed male grackles’ choice behaviour is governed more strongly by the ‘weight’ of relative differences in recent foraging payoffs—i.e., they show more pronounced risk-sensitive learning. Confirming this mechanism, agent-based forward simulations of reinforcement learning—where we simulate ‘birds’ based on empirical estimates of our grackles’ reinforcement learning—replicate our sex-difference behavioural data. Finally, evolutionary modelling revealed natural selection should favour risk-sensitive learning in hypothesised urban-like environments: stable but stochastic settings. Together, these results imply risk-sensitive learning is a winning strategy for urban-invasion leaders, underscoring the potential for life history and cognition to shape invasion success in human-modified environments.

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          Welcome to the Tidyverse

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            How Does It Feel to Be Like a Rolling Stone? Ten Questions About Dispersal Evolution

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              The ecological impacts of nighttime light pollution: a mechanistic appraisal.

              The ecological impacts of nighttime light pollution have been a longstanding source of concern, accentuated by realized and projected growth in electrical lighting. As human communities and lighting technologies develop, artificial light increasingly modifies natural light regimes by encroaching on dark refuges in space, in time, and across wavelengths. A wide variety of ecological implications of artificial light have been identified. However, the primary research to date is largely focused on the disruptive influence of nighttime light on higher vertebrates, and while comprehensive reviews have been compiled along taxonomic lines and within specific research domains, the subject is in need of synthesis within a common mechanistic framework. Here we propose such a framework that focuses on the cross-factoring of the ways in which artificial lighting alters natural light regimes (spatially, temporally, and spectrally), and the ways in which light influences biological systems, particularly the distinction between light as a resource and light as an information source. We review the evidence for each of the combinations of this cross-factoring. As artificial lighting alters natural patterns of light in space, time and across wavelengths, natural patterns of resource use and information flows may be disrupted, with downstream effects to the structure and function of ecosystems. This review highlights: (i) the potential influence of nighttime lighting at all levels of biological organisation (from cell to ecosystem); (ii) the significant impact that even low levels of nighttime light pollution can have; and (iii) the existence of major research gaps, particularly in terms of the impacts of light at population and ecosystem levels, identification of intensity thresholds, and the spatial extent of impacts in the vicinity of artificial lights. © 2013 The Authors. Biological Reviews © 2013 Cambridge Philosophical Society.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Reviewing Editor
                Role: Senior Editor
                Journal
                eLife
                Elife
                eLife
                eLife
                eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd
                2050-084X
                02 April 2024
                2024
                : 12
                : RP89315
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Department of Human Behavior, Ecology and Culture, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology ( https://ror.org/02a33b393) Leipzig Germany
                [2 ] Science of Intelligence Excellence Cluster, Technical University Berlin ( https://ror.org/03v4gjf40) Berlin Germany
                [3 ] Center for Adaptive Rationality, Max Planck Institute for Human Development ( https://ror.org/02pp7px91) Berlin Germany
                University of Sydney ( https://ror.org/0384j8v12) Australia
                Brown University ( https://ror.org/05gq02987) United States
                University of Sydney Australia
                Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, 04103 Leipzig, Germany Leipzig Germany
                Author notes
                [†]

                Department of Linguistic and Cultural Evolution, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany.

                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2331-0920
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1649-3861
                Article
                89315
                10.7554/eLife.89315
                10987091
                38562050
                5de5064d-df23-4abc-b159-da0961c2e6ae
                © 2023, Breen and Deffner

                This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use and redistribution provided that the original author and source are credited.

                History
                : 28 June 2023
                Funding
                Open access funding provided by Max Planck Society. No other funding was received for this work.
                Categories
                Research Article
                Ecology
                Evolutionary Biology
                Custom metadata
                Animals can thrive alongside humans by being expert judges of risk.
                prc

                Life sciences
                dispersal,cognition,rapid range expansion,reinforcement learning,sex differences,great-tailed grackles,other

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