使用参考警报信号来远程量化破碎林地中的“恐惧景观”

P. Mcdonald, Samantha J. Doohan, Kyia J. Eveleigh
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引用次数: 0

摘要

土地利用变化极大地影响了生物多样性,并带来了新的保护挑战,包括更大的捕食压力,尽管这很难量化。在这里,我们通过使用被动声学监测(PAM)和半自动评估协议直接监测破碎林地中的捕食者遭遇,以检测嘈杂的矿工黑头马诺里纳(Manorina melanocephala)的功能参考报警发声。我们证明,测量感知捕食压力的变化,即所谓的“恐惧景观”,在不同时间(多个季节的黎明、中午、黄昏)和空间尺度(小/大碎片和碎片内的边缘/中心位置)的猎物物种是可以实现的。在中午的录音中,与地面捕食者存在有关的声音很少,但更常见的是在小碎片的边缘而不是中心被探测到。虽然在边缘栖息地探测到针对飞禽的空中警报呼叫的可能性也增加了,但在黄昏记录期间,空中警报探测从黎明高峰下降到最低。这些模式不仅反映了嘈杂的矿工占用或被监测斑块的不同部分,而且突出了沿边缘,特别是小斑块的更高感知捕食风险,证明了PAM在量化动物行为时可以提供的细微见解。
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Using referential alarm signals to remotely quantify ‘landscapes of fear’ in fragmented woodland
ABSTRACT Land-use changes have greatly impacted biodiversity and led to new conservation challenges, including greater predation pressure, although this can be difficult to quantify. Here we directly monitor predator encounters in fragmented woodlands by using passive acoustic monitoring (PAM) and a semi-automated assessment protocol to detect functionally referential alarm vocalisations of the noisy miner Manorina melanocephala. We demonstrate that measuring changes in perceived predation pressure, the so-called ‘landscape of fear’, in a prey species across temporal (dawn, midday, dusk across multiple seasons) and spatial scales (small/large fragments and edge/centre locations within fragments) is achievable. Vocalisations linked with ground predator presence were rarer during midday recordings, but more commonly detected from the edge rather than centre of smaller fragments. While the probability of detecting aerial alarm calls directed at flying raptors also increased in edge habitat, aerial alarm detections declined from a dawn peak to a minimum during dusk recordings. These patterns did not simply reflect noisy miner occupancy or different sections of monitored patches, but highlighted higher perceived predation risk along edges, particularly for small patches, demonstrating the nuanced insights that PAM can offer when quantifying animal behaviour.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
25
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Bioacoustics primarily publishes high-quality original research papers and reviews on sound communication in birds, mammals, amphibians, reptiles, fish, insects and other invertebrates, including the following topics : -Communication and related behaviour- Sound production- Hearing- Ontogeny and learning- Bioacoustics in taxonomy and systematics- Impacts of noise- Bioacoustics in environmental monitoring- Identification techniques and applications- Recording and analysis- Equipment and techniques- Ultrasound and infrasound- Underwater sound- Bioacoustical sound structures, patterns, variation and repertoires
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