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

Authors :
Jonas Stiegler
Cara A. Gallagher
Robert Hering
Thomas Müller
Marlee Tucker
Marco Apollonio
Janosch Arnold
Nancy A. Barker
Leon Barthel
Bruno Bassano
Floris M. van Beest
Jerrold L. Belant
Anne Berger
Dean E. Beyer Jr
Laura R. Bidner
Stephen Blake
Konstantin Börner
Francesca Brivio
Rudy Brogi
Bayarbaatar Buuveibaatar
Francesca Cagnacci
Jasja Dekker
Jane Dentinger
Martin Duľa
Jarred F. Duquette
Jana A. Eccard
Meaghan N. Evans
Adam W. Ferguson
Claudia Fichtel
Adam T. Ford
Nicholas L. Fowler
Benedikt Gehr
Wayne M. Getz
Jacob R. Goheen
Benoit Goossens
Stefano Grignolio
Lars Haugaard
Morgan Hauptfleisch
Morten Heim
Marco Heurich
Mark A. J. Hewison
Lynne A. Isbell
René Janssen
Anders Jarnemo
Florian Jeltsch
Jezek Miloš
Petra Kaczensky
Tomasz Kamiński
Peter Kappeler
Katharina Kasper
Todd M. Kautz
Sophia Kimmig
Petter Kjellander
Rafał Kowalczyk
Stephanie Kramer-Schadt
Max Kröschel
Anette Krop-Benesch
Peter Linderoth
Christoph Lobas
Peter Lokeny
Mia-Lana Lührs
Stephanie S. Matsushima
Molly M. McDonough
Jörg Melzheimer
Nicolas Morellet
Dedan K. Ngatia
Leopold Obermair
Kirk A. Olson
Kidan C. Patanant
John C. Payne
Tyler R. Petroelje
Manuel Pina
Josep Piqué
Joseph Premier
Jan Pufelski
Lennart Pyritz
Maurizio Ramanzin
Manuel Roeleke
Christer M. Rolandsen
Sonia Saïd
Robin Sandfort
Krzysztof Schmidt
Niels M. Schmidt
Carolin Scholz
Nadine Schubert
Nuria Selva
Agnieszka Sergiel
Laurel E. K. Serieys
Václav Silovský
Rob Slotow
Leif Sönnichsen
Erling J. Solberg
Mikkel Stelvig
Garrett M. Street
Peter Sunde
Nathan J. Svoboda
Maria Thaker
Maxi Tomowski
Wiebke Ullmann
Abi T. Vanak
Bettina Wachter
Stephen L. Webb
Christopher C. Wilmers
Filip Zieba
Tomasz Zwijacz-Kozica
Niels Blaum
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 15, Iss 1, Pp 1-13 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2024.

Abstract

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.

Subjects

Subjects :
Science

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
15
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Nature Communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.8a567bd4bfa54bc6bfe6f85c5511ead1
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-52381-8