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Antipredator behaviour of African ungulates around human settlements
Authors:Thomas Yamashita  Kaitlyn M Gaynor  John Kioko  Justin Brashares  Christian Kiffner
Institution:1. Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, University of California ‐ Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA;2. Center for Wildlife Management Studies, The School For Field Studies, Karatu, Tanzania
Abstract:As human populations grow and come into more frequent contact with wildlife, it is important to understand how anthropogenic disturbance alters wildlife behaviour. Using fine‐scale spatial analyses, we examined how proximity to human settlements affects antipredator responses of ungulates. We studied seven common ungulate species (Kirk's dik‐dik, Thomson's gazelle, impala, common warthog, common wildebeest, common zebra and Masai giraffe) in the Tarangire–Manyara ecosystem in northern Tanzania. In zebra and giraffe, flight responses to humans were significantly more likely when closer to settlements; however, there was a weak relationship between flight responses and distance to settlement in all other species. While there was largely a weak relationship between proximity to human settlements, the distribution of settlements in the landscape appears to affect wildlife behaviour, suggesting that animals perceive and respond to spatial variation in risk exerted by humans.
Keywords:antipredator behaviour  flight initiation distance  landscape of fear  Tarangire–  Manyara ecosystem
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