连接人类的流动性和动物的活动:当人类不在的时候,熊会玩耍

Benjamin Robira, Andrea Corradini, F. Ossi, F. Cagnacci
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在人类世,关于动物行为灵活性以应对人为变化的研究成果不断积累:人类的存在和活动影响动物物种的分布、运动、活动节奏、生理和饮食。然而,由于缺乏动物和人类方面的同时定量数据,结论受到限制。因此,动物行为与人类活动和流动性之间的动态联系往往被低估。基于对特伦蒂诺地区野生熊种群的长期监测(2006年至2019年监测了10只熊;结合人类活动数据(来自Strava全球热图的累积户外活动指数)和游客数量记录,我们研究了熊的空间行为和活动节奏如何随人类干扰的变化而变化。我们发现熊主要是夜行性的,在每年的尺度上,夜行性与运动行为有关,但两者都独立于经历过的人类干扰。此外,夜间活动倾向于在人类更强烈地开发户外区域的时期增加。总的来说,这些初步发现表明,熊表现出显著的行为灵活性,以尽量减少与人类的接触。通过应用不同来源的人类活动数据,这项工作表明,将高分辨率动物运动数据与人类活动的动态数据相结合,对于有意义地捕捉野生动物对人类活动的反应至关重要。
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Bridging human mobility to animal activity: when humans are away, bears will play
In the Anthropocene, findings on animal behavioral flexibility in response to anthropogenic changes are accumulating: human presence and activity affect the distribution, movement, activity rhythm, physiology, and diet of animal species. However, conclusions are limited by the lack of simultaneous quantitative data on both the animal and human side. Hence, the dynamic link between animal behavior and human activity and mobility is often poorly estimated. Based on long-term monitoring of a wild bear population in the Trentino region (10 bears monitored from 2006 to 2019; 20 bear-years) combined with human mobility data (Cumulative Outdoor activity Index, derived from the Strava Global Heatmap) and tourist count records, we investigated how spatial behavior and activity rhythms of bears change with variations in experienced human disturbance. We found that bears were mainly nocturnal and that, on an annual scale, nocturnality was associated with movement behavior, but both were independent of experienced human disturbance. Furthermore, nocturnality tended to increase in periods of more intense exploitation of outdoor areas by humans. Overall, these preliminary findings show that bears exhibit a notable behavioral flexibility to minimize their exposure to human presence. Through the application of different sources of human activity data, this work showcases that the integration of high resolution animal movement data with dynamic data on human mobility is crucial to meaningfully catch wildlife responses to anthropisation.
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