Applied Wildlife Ecology Lab, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Department, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, United States.
Elife. 2020 Nov 18;9:e60690. doi: 10.7554/eLife.60690.
Wildlife respond to human presence by adjusting their temporal niche, possibly modifying encounter rates among species and trophic dynamics that structure communities. We assessed wildlife diel activity responses to human presence and consequential changes in predator-prey overlap using 11,111 detections of 3 large carnivores and 11 ungulates across 21,430 camera trap-nights in West Africa. Over two-thirds of species exhibited diel responses to mainly diurnal human presence, with ungulate nocturnal activity increasing by 7.1%. Rather than traditional pairwise predator-prey diel comparisons, we considered spatiotemporally explicit predator access to several prey resources to evaluate community-level trophic responses to human presence. Although leopard prey access was not affected by humans, lion and spotted hyena access to three prey species significantly increased when prey increased their nocturnal activity to avoid humans. Human presence considerably influenced the composition of available prey, with implications for prey selection, demonstrating how humans perturb ecological processes via behavioral modifications.
野生动物通过调整时间生态位来应对人类的存在,这可能会改变物种之间的遭遇率和结构社区的营养动态。我们使用西非 21430 个相机陷阱夜间的 11111 次大肉食动物和 11 种有蹄类动物的检测数据,评估了野生动物对人类存在的昼夜活动反应以及由此产生的捕食者-猎物重叠变化。超过三分之二的物种对主要在白天出现的人类存在表现出昼夜反应,而有蹄类动物的夜间活动增加了 7.1%。我们没有进行传统的成对捕食者-猎物昼夜比较,而是考虑了时空上明确的捕食者对几种猎物资源的利用,以评估社区层面上人类存在对营养动态的反应。虽然人类的存在并没有影响到豹子的猎物获取,但狮子和斑点鬣狗对三种猎物物种的获取显著增加,因为猎物为了躲避人类而增加了夜间活动。人类的存在极大地影响了可用猎物的组成,这对猎物选择有影响,表明人类如何通过行为改变来扰乱生态过程。