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在中国一个禁猎区,有蹄类动物对作为顶级捕食者的人类的行为反应。

Ungulates' Behavioral Responses to Humans as an Apex Predator in a Hunting-Prohibited Area of China.

作者信息

Liu Mingzhang, McShea William J, Wang Yidan, Xia Fan, Shen Xiaoli, Li Sheng

机构信息

School of Life Sciences, Institute of Ecology, Peking University, Beijing 100871, China.

Conservation Ecology Center, Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute, Front Royal, VA 22630, USA.

出版信息

Animals (Basel). 2023 Feb 25;13(5):845. doi: 10.3390/ani13050845.

Abstract

Large mammals can perceive humans as predators and therefore adjust their behavior to achieve coexistence with humans. However, lack of research at sites with low hunting intensity limits our understanding of how behavioral responses of animals adapt to different predation risks by humans. At Heshun County in North China, where hunting has been banned for over three decades and only low-intensity poaching exists, we exposed two large ungulates (Siberian roe deer and wild boar ) to the sounds of humans, an extant predator (leopard ) and a control (wind), and examined their flight responses and detection probabilities when hearing different type of sounds. Both species showed higher flight probabilities when hearing human vocalization than wind, and wild boar were even more likely to flee upon hearing human vocalization than leopard roar, suggesting the behavioral response to humans can equal or exceed that of large carnivores in these two ungulates even in an area without hunting practices. Recorded sounds had no effect on detection probability of both ungulates. Additionally, with repeated exposure to sounds, regardless of treatment, roe deer were less likely to flee and wild boars were more likely to be detected, indicating a habituation-type response to sound stimuli. We speculate that the immediate flight behavior rather than shifts in habitat use of the two species reflect the low hunting/poaching pressure at our study site and suggest further examination of physiological status and demographic dynamics of the study species to understand human influence on their long-term persistence.

摘要

大型哺乳动物会将人类视为捕食者,因此会调整自身行为以实现与人类共存。然而,在狩猎强度较低的地区缺乏相关研究,这限制了我们对动物行为反应如何适应人类不同捕食风险的理解。在中国北方的和顺县,狩猎已被禁止三十多年,仅存在低强度偷猎行为,我们让两种大型有蹄类动物(狍子和野猪)接触人类声音、现存捕食者(豹)的声音以及对照声音(风),并研究它们在听到不同类型声音时的逃跑反应和被察觉概率。两种动物在听到人类声音时的逃跑概率均高于听到风声时,而且野猪听到人类声音时比听到豹吼声时更易逃跑,这表明在这两种有蹄类动物中,即使在没有狩猎活动的地区,它们对人类的行为反应可能等同于或超过对大型食肉动物的反应。录制的声音对两种有蹄类动物的被察觉概率没有影响。此外,随着对声音的反复接触,无论处于何种处理条件下,狍子逃跑的可能性降低,野猪被察觉的可能性增加,这表明它们对声音刺激产生了类似习惯化的反应。我们推测,这两个物种的即时逃跑行为而非栖息地使用的变化反映了我们研究地点的低狩猎/偷猎压力,并建议进一步研究这些物种的生理状态和种群动态,以了解人类对它们长期生存的影响。

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