Christiansen Fredrik, McHugh Katherine A, Bejder Lars, Siegal Eilidh M, Lusseau David, McCabe Elizabeth Berens, Lovewell Gretchen, Wells Randall S
Cetacean Research Unit, School of Veterinary and Life Sciences , Murdoch University , Murdoch, Western Australia 6150 , Australia.
Sarasota Dolphin Research Program, Chicago Zoological Society, c/o Mote Marine Laboratory , Sarasota, FL , USA.
R Soc Open Sci. 2016 Dec 21;3(12):160560. doi: 10.1098/rsos.160560. eCollection 2016 Dec.
Food provisioning of wildlife is a major concern for management and conservation agencies worldwide because it encourages unnatural behaviours in wild animals and increases each individual's risk for injury and death. Here we investigate the contributing factors and potential fitness consequences of a recent increase in the frequency of human interactions with common bottlenose dolphins () in Sarasota Bay, Florida. A rising proportion of the local long-term resident dolphin community is becoming conditioned to human interactions through direct and indirect food provisioning. We investigate variables that are affecting conditioning and if the presence of human-induced injuries is higher for conditioned versus unconditioned dolphins. Using the most comprehensive long-term dataset available for a free-ranging bottlenose dolphin population (more than 45 years; more than 32 000 dolphin group sightings; more than 1100 individuals), we found that the association with already conditioned animals strongly affected the probability of dolphins becoming conditioned to human interactions, confirming earlier findings that conditioning is partly a learned behaviour. More importantly, we found that conditioned dolphins were more likely to be injured by human interactions when compared with unconditioned animals. This is alarming, as conditioning could lead to a decrease in survival, which could have population-level consequences. We did not find a significant relationship between human exposure or natural prey availability and the probability of dolphins becoming conditioned. This could be due to low sample size or insufficient spatio-temporal resolution in the available data. Our findings show that wildlife provisioning may lead to a decrease in survival, which could ultimately affect population dynamics.
为野生动物提供食物是全球管理和保护机构主要关注的问题,因为这会促使野生动物表现出非自然行为,并增加每只动物受伤和死亡的风险。在此,我们调查了佛罗里达州萨拉索塔湾普通宽吻海豚()与人类互动频率近期增加的影响因素及潜在的适应性后果。当地长期栖息的海豚群体中,越来越大比例的海豚通过直接和间接的食物供应,对与人类的互动产生了适应性。我们研究了影响这种适应性的变量,以及适应性海豚与未适应性海豚相比,人类导致受伤的情况是否更多。利用可获得的关于自由放养宽吻海豚种群的最全面长期数据集(超过45年;超过32000次海豚群体目击记录;超过1100只个体),我们发现,与已经适应的动物的关联强烈影响海豚对人类互动产生适应性的概率,这证实了早期的研究结果,即适应性在一定程度上是一种习得行为。更重要的是,我们发现,与未适应的动物相比,适应的海豚更有可能因人类互动而受伤。这令人担忧,因为适应性可能导致存活率下降,进而可能产生种群水平的后果。我们没有发现人类接触或自然猎物可获得性与海豚产生适应性的概率之间存在显著关系。这可能是由于样本量小或现有数据的时空分辨率不足。我们的研究结果表明,为野生动物提供食物可能导致存活率下降,最终可能影响种群动态。