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首页> 外文期刊>The Journal of Applied Ecology >Staging behaviours identify spatial and temporal risk of human‐wildlife conflict
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Staging behaviours identify spatial and temporal risk of human‐wildlife conflict

机译:分期行为识别人类与野生动物冲突的空间和时间风险

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Abstract Habitat conversion to farmland has increased human‐wildlife interactions, which often lead to conflict, injury or death for people and animals. Understanding the behavioural and landscape drivers of human‐wildlife conflict is critical for managing wildlife populations. Staging behaviour prior to crop incursions has been described across multiple taxa and offers potential utility in managing conflict, but few quantitative assessments of staging have been undertaken. Animal movement data can provide valuable, fine‐scale information on such behaviour with opportunities for application to real‐time management for conflict prediction. We developed an approach to assess the efficacy of six widely used metrics of animal movement to identify staging behaviour prior to agricultural incursions. We applied this approach to GPS data from 55 African elephants in the Serengeti‐Mara ecosystem and found tortuosity and HMM‐derived behavioural states to be the most effective for identifying staging events. We then assessed temporal patterns of defined staging at daily and seasonal scales and explored environmental and anthropogenic drivers of staging from spatial generalized logistic mixed models. Finally, we tested the viability of combining movement and simple spatial metrics to predict crop incursions based on GPS data. Our approach identified staging behaviour that appeared to be driven largely by human activity and diurnal availability of protective cover from forest, riverine vegetation, and topography. Staging also varied substantially by season. Tortuosity and behavioural state metrics identified different staging strategies with distinct spatial distributions and anthropogenic drivers, and appeared to be linked to the juxtaposition between protected and cultivated lands. Tortuosity‐based staging combined with distance‐to‐agriculture produced promising results for pre‐event prediction of crop incursion. Synthesis and applications. Our study found staging by elephants prior to crop use could be identified from GPS tracking data, indicating that a better understanding of movement behaviour can inform targeted and proactive human‐wildlife conflict management and inform spatial planning efforts. Our approach is extendable to other conflict‐prone species to assess pre‐conflict behaviours and space use and demonstrates some of the challenges and advantages of using animal behaviour to assess temporal and spatial heterogeneity in human‐wildlife conflict.
机译:摘要 生境向农田的转化增加了人类与野生动物的互动,这往往导致人和动物的冲突、伤害或死亡。了解人类与野生动物冲突的行为和景观驱动因素对于管理野生动物种群至关重要。作物入侵前的分期行为已经在多个分类群中被描述,并在管理冲突方面提供了潜在的效用,但很少对分期进行定量评估。动物运动数据可以提供有关此类行为的有价值的精细信息,并有机会应用于冲突预测的实时管理。我们开发了一种方法来评估六个广泛使用的动物运动指标的有效性,以识别农业入侵前的分期行为。我们将这种方法应用于塞伦盖蒂-马拉生态系统中 55 头非洲大象的 GPS 数据,发现曲折和 HMM 衍生的行为状态对于识别分期事件最有效。然后,我们评估了每日和季节性尺度上定义分期的时间模式,并从空间广义逻辑混合模型中探索了分期的环境和人为驱动因素。最后,我们测试了结合运动和简单空间指标来预测基于GPS数据的作物入侵的可行性。我们的方法确定了似乎主要由人类活动和森林、河流植被和地形保护性覆盖的昼夜可用性驱动的分期行为。分期也因季节而异。迂曲和行为状态指标确定了具有不同空间分布和人为驱动因素的不同分期策略,并且似乎与保护区和耕地之间的并列有关。基于迂曲的分期与农业距离相结合,为作物入侵的事前预测产生了有希望的结果。合成与应用.我们的研究发现,可以从GPS跟踪数据中识别大象在作物使用前的分期,这表明更好地了解运动行为可以为有针对性和主动性的人与野生动物冲突管理提供信息,并为空间规划工作提供信息。我们的方法可扩展到其他易发生冲突的物种,以评估冲突前的行为和空间利用,并展示了使用动物行为来评估人类与野生动物冲突中的时间和空间异质性的一些挑战和优势。

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