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Mammalian predator and prey responses to recreation and land use across multiple scales provide limited support for the human shield hypothesis

Outdoor recreation is widespread, with uncertain effects on wildlife. The human shield hypothesis (HSH) suggests that recreation could have differential effects on predators and prey, with predator avoidance of humans creating a spatial refuge ‘shielding’ prey from people. The generality of the HSH...

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Autores principales: Granados, Alys, Sun, Catherine, Fisher, Jason T., Ladle, Andrew, Dawe, Kimberly, Beirne, Christopher, Boyce, Mark S., Chow, Emily, Heim, Nicole, Fennell, Mitchell, Klees van Bommel, Joanna, Naidoo, Robin, Procko, Michael, Stewart, Frances E. C., Burton, A. Cole
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10500421/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37720065
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.10464
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author Granados, Alys
Sun, Catherine
Fisher, Jason T.
Ladle, Andrew
Dawe, Kimberly
Beirne, Christopher
Boyce, Mark S.
Chow, Emily
Heim, Nicole
Fennell, Mitchell
Klees van Bommel, Joanna
Naidoo, Robin
Procko, Michael
Stewart, Frances E. C.
Burton, A. Cole
author_facet Granados, Alys
Sun, Catherine
Fisher, Jason T.
Ladle, Andrew
Dawe, Kimberly
Beirne, Christopher
Boyce, Mark S.
Chow, Emily
Heim, Nicole
Fennell, Mitchell
Klees van Bommel, Joanna
Naidoo, Robin
Procko, Michael
Stewart, Frances E. C.
Burton, A. Cole
author_sort Granados, Alys
collection PubMed
description Outdoor recreation is widespread, with uncertain effects on wildlife. The human shield hypothesis (HSH) suggests that recreation could have differential effects on predators and prey, with predator avoidance of humans creating a spatial refuge ‘shielding’ prey from people. The generality of the HSH remains to be tested across larger scales, wherein human shielding may prove generalizable, or diminish with variability in ecological contexts. We combined data from 446 camera traps and 79,279 sampling days across 10 landscapes spanning 15,840 km(2) in western Canada. We used hierarchical models to quantify the influence of recreation and landscape disturbance (roads, logging) on ungulate prey (moose, mule deer and elk) and carnivore (wolf, grizzly bear, cougar and black bear) site use. We found limited support for the HSH and strong responses to recreation at local but not larger spatial scales. Only mule deer showed positive but weak landscape‐level responses to recreation. Elk were positively associated with local recreation while moose and mule deer responses were negative, contrary to HSH predictions. Mule deer showed a more complex interaction between recreation and land‐use disturbance, with more negative responses to recreation at lower road density or higher logged areas. Contrary to HSH predictions, carnivores did not avoid recreation and grizzly bear site use was positively associated. We also tested the effects of roads and logging on temporal activity overlap between mule deer and recreation, expecting deer to minimize interaction with humans by partitioning time in areas subject to more habitat disturbance. However, temporal overlap between people and deer increased with road density. Our findings highlight the complex ecological patterns that emerge at macroecological scales. There is a need for expanded monitoring of human and wildlife use of recreation areas, particularly multi‐scale and ‐species approaches to studying the interacting effects of recreation and land‐use change on wildlife.
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spelling pubmed-105004212023-09-15 Mammalian predator and prey responses to recreation and land use across multiple scales provide limited support for the human shield hypothesis Granados, Alys Sun, Catherine Fisher, Jason T. Ladle, Andrew Dawe, Kimberly Beirne, Christopher Boyce, Mark S. Chow, Emily Heim, Nicole Fennell, Mitchell Klees van Bommel, Joanna Naidoo, Robin Procko, Michael Stewart, Frances E. C. Burton, A. Cole Ecol Evol Research Articles Outdoor recreation is widespread, with uncertain effects on wildlife. The human shield hypothesis (HSH) suggests that recreation could have differential effects on predators and prey, with predator avoidance of humans creating a spatial refuge ‘shielding’ prey from people. The generality of the HSH remains to be tested across larger scales, wherein human shielding may prove generalizable, or diminish with variability in ecological contexts. We combined data from 446 camera traps and 79,279 sampling days across 10 landscapes spanning 15,840 km(2) in western Canada. We used hierarchical models to quantify the influence of recreation and landscape disturbance (roads, logging) on ungulate prey (moose, mule deer and elk) and carnivore (wolf, grizzly bear, cougar and black bear) site use. We found limited support for the HSH and strong responses to recreation at local but not larger spatial scales. Only mule deer showed positive but weak landscape‐level responses to recreation. Elk were positively associated with local recreation while moose and mule deer responses were negative, contrary to HSH predictions. Mule deer showed a more complex interaction between recreation and land‐use disturbance, with more negative responses to recreation at lower road density or higher logged areas. Contrary to HSH predictions, carnivores did not avoid recreation and grizzly bear site use was positively associated. We also tested the effects of roads and logging on temporal activity overlap between mule deer and recreation, expecting deer to minimize interaction with humans by partitioning time in areas subject to more habitat disturbance. However, temporal overlap between people and deer increased with road density. Our findings highlight the complex ecological patterns that emerge at macroecological scales. There is a need for expanded monitoring of human and wildlife use of recreation areas, particularly multi‐scale and ‐species approaches to studying the interacting effects of recreation and land‐use change on wildlife. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2023-09-14 /pmc/articles/PMC10500421/ /pubmed/37720065 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.10464 Text en © 2023 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Granados, Alys
Sun, Catherine
Fisher, Jason T.
Ladle, Andrew
Dawe, Kimberly
Beirne, Christopher
Boyce, Mark S.
Chow, Emily
Heim, Nicole
Fennell, Mitchell
Klees van Bommel, Joanna
Naidoo, Robin
Procko, Michael
Stewart, Frances E. C.
Burton, A. Cole
Mammalian predator and prey responses to recreation and land use across multiple scales provide limited support for the human shield hypothesis
title Mammalian predator and prey responses to recreation and land use across multiple scales provide limited support for the human shield hypothesis
title_full Mammalian predator and prey responses to recreation and land use across multiple scales provide limited support for the human shield hypothesis
title_fullStr Mammalian predator and prey responses to recreation and land use across multiple scales provide limited support for the human shield hypothesis
title_full_unstemmed Mammalian predator and prey responses to recreation and land use across multiple scales provide limited support for the human shield hypothesis
title_short Mammalian predator and prey responses to recreation and land use across multiple scales provide limited support for the human shield hypothesis
title_sort mammalian predator and prey responses to recreation and land use across multiple scales provide limited support for the human shield hypothesis
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10500421/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37720065
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.10464
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