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Costs of group-living for a normally solitary forager: effects of provisioning tourism on southern stingrays Dasyatis americana

机译:一个通常孤独的觅食者的集体生活成本:为南部黄貂鱼提供旅游资源的影响

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ABSTRACT: Animals can perceive tourists as predators and will incur fitness costs should their predator-avoidance behaviours result in forgone resource acquisition. Not all wildlife, however, treat tourists as predators; animals can respond positively to tourists, especially when food is used as an attractant. We investigate the costs posed by novel grouping over a tourism-provisioned food resource in a normally solitary forager, the southern stingray Dasyatis americana, in Grand Cayman. Specifically, we test the hypotheses that group-living stingrays in a new environment—which includes both the presence of tourists and quickly renewing food patches—will be exposed to increased injuries, ecto-dermal parasites and aggressive interference competition that result from the unusual grouping behaviour. We found that, in comparison to stingrays from non-tourist sites, tourist-fed stingrays are more likely to have lower body condition, be injured by boats and predators, be susceptible to ecto-dermal parasites, and be engaged in intense interference competition (in the form of conspecific bite marks). Stingrays from tourist sites also have significantly higher mean numbers of injuries, parasites, and median bite marks. By exploring alternative hypotheses to explain the pattern of our findings (e.g. natural causes/behaviour), we unequivocally show that the impacts incurred by the stingrays stem from the effects of tourism. These findings suggest that novel grouping poses costs to the stingrays; the tourist site represents a riskier habitat with regards to injury and predation; and there may be long-term fitness consequences. From a management perspective, measures should be taken to alleviate the crowded conditions at tourist sites, in terms of both boat and stingray density.
机译:摘要:动物会把游客视为掠食者,如果避免其掠食者的行为导致资源的获取,它们将招致健身费用。但是,并非所有野生动物都将游客视为掠食者。动物可以对游客产生积极的反应,特别是当食物被用作引诱剂时。我们调查了在大开曼岛一个通常为单独觅食的南部黄貂鱼(is Dasyatis americana)上由旅游业提供的食物资源上的新颖分组所造成的成本。具体来说,我们检验了以下假设:在新环境中(包括游客的到来和快速更新的食物补丁),居住在群居的黄貂鱼将遭受由异常分组导致的伤害增加,表皮寄生虫和激进的干扰竞争行为。我们发现,与来自非旅游场所的黄貂鱼相比,由游客喂养的黄貂鱼更可能具有较低的身体状况,被船和掠食者伤害,易受表皮寄生虫感染并参与激烈的干扰竞争(以特定的咬痕的形式)。来自旅游景点的黄貂鱼的受伤,寄生虫和中位叮咬痕迹的平均数也明显更高。通过探索其他假设来解释我们的发现的模式(例如自然原因/行为),我们明确地表明,黄貂鱼所产生的影响源于旅游业的影响。这些发现表明,新颖的分组给黄貂鱼带来了代价。就伤害和掠夺而言,旅游胜地代表着风险更高的栖息地;可能会导致长期健身问题。从管理的角度看,应采取措施从船和黄貂鱼的密度上缓解旅游景点的拥挤状况。

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