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首页> 外文期刊>Integrative and Comparative Biology >No Effect of Human Presence at Night on Disease, Body Mass, or Metabolism in Rural and Urban House Finches (Haemorhous mexicanus)
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No Effect of Human Presence at Night on Disease, Body Mass, or Metabolism in Rural and Urban House Finches (Haemorhous mexicanus)

机译:在农村和城市房屋雀(Hoomorhous Mexicanus)的疾病,体重或新陈代谢晚上没有人体存在的影响

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摘要

Global urban development continues to accelerate and have diverse effects on wildlife. Although most studies of anthropogenic impacts on animals have focused on indirect effects (e.g., environmental modifications like habitat change or pollution), there may also be direct effects of physical human presence and actions on wildlife stress, behavior, and persistence in cities. Most studies on how humans physically interact with wildlife have focused on the active, daytime phase of diurnal animals, rarely considering effects of our night-time activities. We hypothesized that, if night-time human presence is a stressor for wildlife that are not commonly exposed to humans, night-disturbed rural animals would show stronger physiological signs of elevated stress than would urban individuals. Specifically, we experimentally investigated the effects of human presence at night (HPAN) on disease, body mass, and mass-specific metabolic rates in urban-and rural-caught house finches (Haemorhous mexicanus) in captivity. Our HPAN treatment consisted of a human entering the housing room of the birds and briefly jostling the home cages of each finch as the person walked around the room for a 3-min period on five randomly selected nights per week. Compared with a control (night-undisturbed) group, we found that HPAN greatly increased the odds finches were awake for ca. 33 min post-disturbance, but that chronic treatment did not alter body mass, parasitic infection by coccidian endoparasites, or mass-specific basal metabolic rates. Additionally, finches caught from urban and rural sites did not differ in their response to the treatment. Overall, our results are consistent with those showing that brief but regular human disturbances can have acute negative effects on wildlife, but carry few if any long-term metabolic or disease-related costs in fast-lived birds. However, these findings contrast with the broad, chronic physiological effects of other anthropogenic changes, such as artificial light at night, and highlight the differential impacts that various human activities (which differ in sensory stimulus type, perceived threat, duration and intensity, etc.) can have on wildlife health and behavior.
机译:全球城市发展继续加速,对野生动物产生多种影响。虽然大多数对动物的人为影响的研究都集中在间接影响(例如,环境修改,如栖息地变化或污染物),但在城市的野生动物压力,行为和持久性等人的人体存在和行为也可能会直接影响。大多数关于人类如何与野生动物互动的研究都集中在昼夜动物的活跃,白天阶段,很少考虑我们的夜间活动的影响。我们假设,如果夜间人类存在是野生动物的压力,那些不常见于人类的野生动物,夜间受到的农村动物将表现出比城市个人的压力高的强烈生理迹象。具体而言,我们通过在囚禁中通过实验研究了夜间(HPAN)对疾病,体重和肿块特异性代谢率的影响。我们的HPAN治疗包括一个人进入鸟类住房室,并在每周五个随机选择的夜晚围绕房间短暂地走在房间里,短暂地开始了每个雀的家庭笼子。与对照(夜间未受干扰的)组相比,我们发现HPAN大大增加了雀雀醒来的CA. 33分钟后扰动,但慢性治疗没有改变体重,通过氟啶内甲酸酯,寄生虫感染,或群体特异性基础代谢率。此外,从城市和农村地点捕获的雀群并没有对治疗的回应没有差异。总体而言,我们的结果与那些表现出简要但定期人类紊乱的结果符合对野生动物的急性负面影响,但如果任何长期的代谢或疾病相关的鸟类的成本就会携带少数。然而,这些发现与其他人为变化的宽泛,慢性生理效果形成鲜明对比,例如人造光在夜间,并突出各种人类活动(在感觉刺激类型,感知威胁,持续时间和强度等方面的差异影响。 )可以对野生动物健康和行为进行。

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