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城市中人类与野生动物冲突的进化后果。

The evolutionary consequences of human-wildlife conflict in cities.

作者信息

Schell Christopher J, Stanton Lauren A, Young Julie K, Angeloni Lisa M, Lambert Joanna E, Breck Stewart W, Murray Maureen H

机构信息

School of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences University of Washington Tacoma Tacoma WA USA.

Department of Zoology and Physiology University of Wyoming Laramie WY USA.

出版信息

Evol Appl. 2020 Sep 29;14(1):178-197. doi: 10.1111/eva.13131. eCollection 2021 Jan.

Abstract

Human-wildlife interactions, including human-wildlife conflict, are increasingly common as expanding urbanization worldwide creates more opportunities for people to encounter wildlife. Wildlife-vehicle collisions, zoonotic disease transmission, property damage, and physical attacks to people or their pets have negative consequences for both people and wildlife, underscoring the need for comprehensive strategies that mitigate and prevent conflict altogether. Management techniques often aim to deter, relocate, or remove individual organisms, all of which may present a significant selective force in both urban and nonurban systems. Management-induced selection may significantly affect the adaptive or nonadaptive evolutionary processes of urban populations, yet few studies explicate the links among conflict, wildlife management, and urban evolution. Moreover, the intensity of conflict management can vary considerably by taxon, public perception, policy, religious and cultural beliefs, and geographic region, which underscores the complexity of developing flexible tools to reduce conflict. Here, we present a cross-disciplinary perspective that integrates human-wildlife conflict, wildlife management, and urban evolution to address how social-ecological processes drive wildlife adaptation in cities. We emphasize that variance in implemented management actions shapes the strength and rate of phenotypic and evolutionary change. We also consider how specific management strategies either promote genetic or plastic changes, and how leveraging those biological inferences could help optimize management actions while minimizing conflict. Investigating human-wildlife conflict as an evolutionary phenomenon may provide insights into how conflict arises and how management plays a critical role in shaping urban wildlife phenotypes.

摘要

随着全球城市化进程的加快,人类与野生动物的互动,包括人类与野生动物的冲突,变得越来越普遍,这为人们接触野生动物创造了更多机会。野生动物与车辆碰撞、人畜共患病传播、财产损失以及对人或其宠物的身体攻击,对人类和野生动物都产生了负面影响,这凸显了制定全面战略以减轻和预防冲突的必要性。管理技术通常旨在威慑、迁移或清除个体生物,所有这些在城市和非城市系统中都可能构成强大的选择压力。管理引发的选择可能会显著影响城市种群的适应性或非适应性进化过程,但很少有研究阐明冲突、野生动物管理和城市进化之间的联系。此外,冲突管理的强度会因物种、公众认知、政策、宗教和文化信仰以及地理区域而有很大差异,这凸显了开发灵活工具以减少冲突的复杂性。在这里,我们提出一种跨学科的观点,将人类与野生动物的冲突、野生动物管理和城市进化整合起来,以探讨社会生态过程如何推动城市野生动物的适应。我们强调,实施的管理行动的差异塑造了表型和进化变化的强度和速度。我们还考虑了特定的管理策略如何促进遗传或可塑性变化,以及利用这些生物学推断如何有助于优化管理行动,同时将冲突降至最低。将人类与野生动物的冲突作为一种进化现象来研究,可能会为冲突的产生方式以及管理在塑造城市野生动物表型方面如何发挥关键作用提供见解。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/2aa3/7819564/12f965b29060/EVA-14-178-g001.jpg

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