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Mammals show faster recovery from capture and tagging in human-disturbed landscapes.

Authors :
Stiegler J
Gallagher CA
Hering R
Müller T
Tucker M
Apollonio M
Arnold J
Barker NA
Barthel L
Bassano B
Beest FMV
Belant JL
Berger A
Beyer DE Jr
Bidner LR
Blake S
Börner K
Brivio F
Brogi R
Buuveibaatar B
Cagnacci F
Dekker J
Dentinger J
Duľa M
Duquette JF
Eccard JA
Evans MN
Ferguson AW
Fichtel C
Ford AT
Fowler NL
Gehr B
Getz WM
Goheen JR
Goossens B
Grignolio S
Haugaard L
Hauptfleisch M
Heim M
Heurich M
Hewison MAJ
Isbell LA
Janssen R
Jarnemo A
Jeltsch F
Miloš J
Kaczensky P
Kamiński T
Kappeler P
Kasper K
Kautz TM
Kimmig S
Kjellander P
Kowalczyk R
Kramer-Schadt S
Kröschel M
Krop-Benesch A
Linderoth P
Lobas C
Lokeny P
Lührs ML
Matsushima SS
McDonough MM
Melzheimer J
Morellet N
Ngatia DK
Obermair L
Olson KA
Patanant KC
Payne JC
Petroelje TR
Pina M
Piqué J
Premier J
Pufelski J
Pyritz L
Ramanzin M
Roeleke M
Rolandsen CM
Saïd S
Sandfort R
Schmidt K
Schmidt NM
Scholz C
Schubert N
Selva N
Sergiel A
Serieys LEK
Silovský V
Slotow R
Sönnichsen L
Solberg EJ
Stelvig M
Street GM
Sunde P
Svoboda NJ
Thaker M
Tomowski M
Ullmann W
Vanak AT
Wachter B
Webb SL
Wilmers CC
Zieba F
Zwijacz-Kozica T
Blaum N
Source :
Nature communications [Nat Commun] 2024 Sep 15; Vol. 15 (1), pp. 8079. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Sep 15.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Wildlife tagging provides critical insights into animal movement ecology, physiology, and behavior amid global ecosystem changes. However, the stress induced by capture, handling, and tagging can impact post-release locomotion and activity and, consequently, the interpretation of study results. Here, we analyze post-tagging effects on 1585 individuals of 42 terrestrial mammal species using collar-collected GPS and accelerometer data. Species-specific displacements and overall dynamic body acceleration, as a proxy for activity, were assessed over 20 days post-release to quantify disturbance intensity, recovery duration, and speed. Differences were evaluated, considering species-specific traits and the human footprint of the study region. Over 70% of the analyzed species exhibited significant behavioral changes following collaring events. Herbivores traveled farther with variable activity reactions, while omnivores and carnivores were initially less active and mobile. Recovery duration proved brief, with alterations diminishing within 4-7 tracking days for most species. Herbivores, particularly males, showed quicker displacement recovery (4 days) but slower activity recovery (7 days). Individuals in high human footprint areas displayed faster recovery, indicating adaptation to human disturbance. Our findings emphasize the necessity of extending tracking periods beyond 1 week and particular caution in remote study areas or herbivore-focused research, specifically in smaller mammals.<br /> (© 2024. The Author(s).)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2041-1723
Volume :
15
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
39278967
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-52381-8