Aquatic Megafauna Research Unit, Centre for Sustainable Aquatic Ecosystems, Harry Butler Institute, Murdoch University, Murdoch, 6150, Australia.
Environmental and Conservation Sciences, Murdoch University, Murdoch, 6150, Australia.
Sci Rep. 2019 Jun 20;9(1):8981. doi: 10.1038/s41598-019-45395-6.
Food-provisioning of wildlife can facilitate reliable up-close encounters desirable by tourists and, consequently, tour operators. Food-provisioning can alter the natural behavior of an animal, encouraging adverse behavior (e.g. begging for food handouts), and affect the reproductive success and the viability of a population. Studies linking food-provisioning to reproductive success are limited due to the lack of long-term datasets available, especially for long-lived species such as marine mammals. In Bunbury, Western Australia, a state-licensed food-provisioning program offers fish handouts to a limited number of free-ranging bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops aduncus). Coupled with long-term historical data, this small (<200 individuals), resident dolphin population has been extensively studied for over ten years, offering an opportunity to examine the effect of food-provisioning on the reproductive success of females (n = 63; n = 8). Female reproductive success was estimated as the number of weaned calves produced per reproductive years and calf survival at year one and three years old was investigated. The mean reproductive success of provisioned and non-provisioned females was compared using Bayes factor. We also used generalized linear models (GLMs) to examine female reproductive success in relation to the occurrence of food-provisioning, begging behavior and location (within the study area). Furthermore, we examined the influence of these variables and birth order and climatic fluctuations (e.g. El Niño Southern Oscillation) on calf survival. Bayes factor analyses (Bayes factor = 6.12) and results from the best fitting GLMs showed that female reproductive success and calf survival were negatively influenced by food-provisioning. The negative effects of food-provisioning, although only affecting a small proportion of the adult females' population (13.2%), are of concern, especially given previous work showing that this population is declining.
为野生动物提供食物可以促进游客所期望的可靠的近距离接触,从而促进旅游运营商的发展。食物供应可以改变动物的自然行为,鼓励不良行为(例如乞讨食物施舍),并影响繁殖成功和种群的生存能力。由于缺乏长期可用的数据集,特别是对于像海洋哺乳动物这样的长寿物种,将食物供应与繁殖成功联系起来的研究受到限制。在西澳大利亚州的本伯里,一个州许可的食物供应计划向数量有限的自由放养的宽吻海豚(Tursiops aduncus)提供鱼类施舍。结合长期的历史数据,这个小(<200 个个体)、常驻的海豚种群已经被广泛研究了十多年,为研究食物供应对雌性繁殖成功的影响提供了机会(n=63;n=8)。雌性繁殖成功估计为每个繁殖年生产的断奶幼仔数量,并调查了一岁和三岁幼仔的存活率。使用贝叶斯因子比较了供应和非供应雌性的平均繁殖成功率。我们还使用广义线性模型(GLMs)来研究与食物供应、乞食行为和位置(在研究区域内)有关的雌性繁殖成功。此外,我们还检查了这些变量以及出生顺序和气候波动(例如厄尔尼诺南方涛动)对幼仔存活率的影响。贝叶斯因子分析(贝叶斯因子=6.12)和最佳拟合 GLMs 的结果表明,雌性繁殖成功率和幼仔存活率受到食物供应的负面影响。食物供应的负面影响虽然只影响成年雌性群体的一小部分(13.2%),但令人担忧,特别是考虑到之前的研究表明该种群正在减少。