Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Ithaca, New York, United States of America.
Wildlife Conservation Society, Congo Program, Brazzaville, Republic of Congo.
PLoS One. 2024 Jul 26;19(7):e0306932. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0306932. eCollection 2024.
The impacts of human activities and climate change on animal populations often take considerable time before they are reflected in typical measures of population health such as population size, demography, and landscape use. Earlier detection of such impacts could enhance the effectiveness of conservation strategies, particularly for species with slow population growth. Passive acoustic monitoring is increasingly used to estimate occupancy and population size, but this tool can also monitor subtle shifts in behavior that might be early indicators of changing impacts. Here we use data from an acoustic grid, monitoring 1250 km2 of forest in northern Republic of Congo, to study how forest elephants (Loxodonta cyclotis) assess risk associated with human impacts across a landscape that includes a national park as well as active and inactive logging concessions. By quantifying emerging patterns of behavior at the population level, arising from individual-based decisions, we gain an understanding of how elephants perceive their landscape along an axis of human disturbance. Forest elephants in relatively undisturbed forests are active nearly equally day and night. However, they become more nocturnal when exposed to a perceived risk such as poaching. We assessed elephant perception of risk by monitoring changes in the likelihood of nocturnal vocal activity relative to differing levels of human activity. We show that logging is perceived to be a risk on moderate time and small spatial scales, but with little effect on elephant density. However, risk avoidance persisted in areas with relatively easy access to poachers and in more open habitats where poaching has historically been concentrated. Increased nocturnal activity is a common response in many animals to human intrusion on the landscape. Provided a species is acoustically active, passive acoustic monitoring can measure changes in human impact at early stages of such change, informing management priorities.
人类活动和气候变化对动物种群的影响通常需要相当长的时间才能反映在种群健康的典型指标上,如种群规模、人口统计学和景观利用。更早地发现这些影响可以提高保护策略的有效性,特别是对于那些种群增长缓慢的物种。被动声学监测越来越多地用于估计占有量和种群规模,但这种工具也可以监测行为的微妙变化,这些变化可能是影响变化的早期指标。在这里,我们使用来自刚果共和国北部一个声学网格的数据,该网格监测了 1250 平方公里的森林,研究了森林象(Loxodonta cyclotis)如何在包括国家公园以及活跃和不活跃的伐木特许权在内的景观中评估与人类影响相关的风险。通过量化个体决策引起的种群水平上出现的行为模式,我们了解了大象如何在人类干扰的轴线上感知它们的景观。在相对未受干扰的森林中,森林象几乎日夜都很活跃。然而,当它们面临诸如偷猎等感知到的风险时,它们会变得更加夜间活动。我们通过监测夜间发声活动的可能性相对于不同水平的人类活动的变化来评估大象对风险的感知。我们表明,伐木在中等时间和小空间尺度上被视为一种风险,但对大象密度的影响很小。然而,在相对容易接近偷猎者的地区和历史上集中偷猎的更开阔栖息地,仍存在避免风险的情况。在许多动物中,夜间活动增加是对景观上人类入侵的常见反应。只要一个物种是声学活跃的,被动声学监测就可以在这种变化的早期阶段测量人类影响的变化,为管理重点提供信息。