人类的存在与鸟类的叫声和歌声数量呈正相关:国家公园评估

IF 1.8 3区 生物学 Q3 ECOLOGY European Journal of Wildlife Research Pub Date : 2024-02-17 DOI:10.1007/s10344-024-01772-9
Javier Pérez-González, Guillermo Rey-Gozalo, Sebastián J. Hidalgo-de-Trucios
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引用次数: 0

摘要

人类干扰已被证明会引起鸟类的生理和行为反应,因此以自然为基础的旅游业可能会减少鸟类的数量和多样性。在国家公园等受高度保护的地区,人类干扰的负面影响可能会在最终的大规模活动中最大化。在这项研究中,我们分析了在鸟类博览会(大型活动)期间数千名游客的存在和干扰对蒙弗拉圭国家公园(西班牙)鸟类群落声景的影响。我们发现,在大型活动期间,鸟类发声的数量和多样性并没有减少。与此相反,蒙弗拉圭国家公园中的人类存在与鸟类发声数量和多样性的增加有关。人类的存在对鸟类叫声和鸣声数量的影响有所不同:在大规模活动期间,当有人存在时,鸟类叫声数量主要增加;而当有人存在时,鸟类鸣声数量增加,尤其是在没有大规模活动的测量活动期间。人盾假说以及其他行为和环境因素有可能解释所获得的结果。
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Human presence is positively related to the number of bird calls and songs: Assessment in a national park

Human disturbance has been shown to provoke physiological and behavioral responses in birds, so nature-based tourism might reduce bird abundance and diversity. The negative consequences of human disturbance might be expected to be maximized during eventual massive events in highly protected areas such as national parks. In this study, the consequences for soundscapes of human presence and disturbance of thousands of visitors during an ornithological fair (massive event) on the bird community of the Monfragüe National Park (Spain) were analyzed. We found that the number and diversity of bird vocalizations did not decrease during the massive event. In contrast, the presence of people in the Monfragüe National Park was associated with an increase in the number and diversity of vocalizations. The effect of human presence on the number of calls and songs differed: the number of calls mainly increased during the massive event when people were present, while the number of songs increased when people were present, particularly during the measurement campaign without the massive event. The human shield hypothesis, along with other behavioral and environmental factors, might potentially explain the results obtained.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
5.00%
发文量
68
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: European Journal of Wildlife Research focuses on all aspects of wildlife biology. Main areas are: applied wildlife ecology; diseases affecting wildlife population dynamics, conservation, economy or public health; ecotoxicology; management for conservation, hunting or pest control; population genetics; and the sustainable use of wildlife as a natural resource. Contributions to socio-cultural aspects of human-wildlife relationships and to the history and sociology of hunting will also be considered.
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