Are super-predators also super-scary? A systematic review and meta-analysis of animal responses to human interactions

Shawn Dsouza, Kartik Shanker, Maria Thaker
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Abstract

Human induced rapid environmental change has been recognized as a global threat to natural systems and the organisms that inhabit them. Human hunters and fishers interact with animals in natural spaces as predators, and are more effective in capturing prey and reducing populations than natural predators overall. On the other hand, seemingly benign interactions with humans, such as tourism, may also be perceived as threatening and have negative impacts on animal populations. Here, we provide a synthesis of the current knowledge of the combined effects of lethal and non-lethal human interactions on the behavioural responses of animals in natural spaces. We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of literature published over the past three decades, and built a dataset to determine the relative effect of lethal and non-lethal human interactions on foraging, vigilance, and movement behaviors of wild animals. Lethal human interactions included hunting, fishing, and retaliatory killing in response to conflict, and non-lethal human interactions were distinguished as active (snorkeling, scuba diving, pedestrians, hiking, and tourists) or passive (roads, human settlements, sonar, and boat traffic). We also considered how the trophic level of the species and body size could influence the effect of human interactions on animal behavior. Our findings show that lethal human interactions had a significant effect on the behaviors of animals, causing animals that are actively hunted by humans to increase vigilance, reduce foraging, and alter movements. Both active and passive non-lethal interactions had weaker and non-significant effects on altering these behaviours of animals. Overall, our meta-analysis shows that the impact of non-lethal human activities in eliciting fear-driven behavioural changes in prey does not seem to have broad empirical support. It also suggests that the intensity of effect of the human super-predator may depend on the trophic level of affected species, or the history of the human-animal interactions in that landscape, In order to understand the nuances of these effects, systematic studies across more species and geographic regions are needed.
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超级掠食者也超级可怕吗?动物对人类互动反应的系统回顾和荟萃分析
人类引起的环境急剧变化已被公认为是对自然系统及其栖息生物的全球性威胁。人类猎手和渔民作为捕食者与自然空间中的动物互动,在捕获猎物和减少种群数量方面比自然捕食者总体上更为有效。另一方面,旅游业等看似良性的人类互动也可能被视为威胁,并对动物种群产生负面影响。在此,我们对目前关于致命性和非致命性人类互动对自然空间中动物行为反应的综合影响的知识进行了综述。我们对过去三十年发表的文献进行了系统回顾和荟萃分析,并建立了一个数据集,以确定致命性和非致命性人类互动对野生动物觅食、警惕性和运动行为的相对影响。致命性的人类互动包括狩猎、捕鱼和为应对冲突而进行的报复性杀戮,而非致命性的人类互动则分为主动性(浮潜、潜水、行人、徒步旅行和游客)和被动性(道路、人类居住区、声纳和船只交通)。我们还考虑了物种的营养级和体型如何影响人类互动对动物行为的影响。我们的研究结果表明,人类的致命性互动对动物的行为有显著影响,导致被人类主动捕猎的动物提高警惕、减少觅食并改变运动方式。主动和被动的非致命性互动对改变动物这些行为的影响较弱,且不显著。总之,我们的荟萃分析表明,人类的非致命性活动在引起猎物恐惧行为变化方面的影响似乎没有得到广泛的经验支持。为了了解这些影响的细微差别,需要对更多物种和地理区域进行系统研究。
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