Population, behavioural and physiological responses of an urban population of black swans to an intense annual noise event.

Wild animals in urban environments are exposed to a broad range of human activities that have the potential to disturb their life history and behaviour. Wildlife responses to disturbance can range from emigration to modified behaviour, or elevated stress, but these responses are rarely evaluated in...

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Main Authors: Catherine J Payne, Tim S Jessop, Patrick-Jean Guay, Michele Johnstone, Megan Feore, Raoul A Mulder
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3443219?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-961a7893d90e4ff5a03f3dd3327a894a2020-11-25T00:12:14ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0179e4501410.1371/journal.pone.0045014Population, behavioural and physiological responses of an urban population of black swans to an intense annual noise event.Catherine J PayneTim S JessopPatrick-Jean GuayMichele JohnstoneMegan FeoreRaoul A MulderWild animals in urban environments are exposed to a broad range of human activities that have the potential to disturb their life history and behaviour. Wildlife responses to disturbance can range from emigration to modified behaviour, or elevated stress, but these responses are rarely evaluated in concert. We simultaneously examined population, behavioural and hormonal responses of an urban population of black swans Cygnus atratus before, during and after an annual disturbance event involving large crowds and intense noise, the Australian Formula One Grand Prix. Black swan population numbers were lowest one week before the event and rose gradually over the course of the study, peaking after the event, suggesting that the disturbance does not trigger mass emigration. We also found no difference in the proportion of time spent on key behaviours such as locomotion, foraging, resting or self-maintenance over the course of the study. However, basal and capture stress-induced corticosterone levels showed significant variation, consistent with a modest physiological response. Basal plasma corticosterone levels were highest before the event and decreased over the course of the study. Capture-induced stress levels peaked during the Grand Prix and then also declined over the remainder of the study. Our results suggest that even intensely noisy and apparently disruptive events may have relatively low measurable short-term impact on population numbers, behaviour or physiology in urban populations with apparently high tolerance to anthropogenic disturbance. Nevertheless, the potential long-term impact of such disturbance on reproductive success, individual fitness and population health will need to be carefully evaluated.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3443219?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Catherine J Payne
Tim S Jessop
Patrick-Jean Guay
Michele Johnstone
Megan Feore
Raoul A Mulder
spellingShingle Catherine J Payne
Tim S Jessop
Patrick-Jean Guay
Michele Johnstone
Megan Feore
Raoul A Mulder
Population, behavioural and physiological responses of an urban population of black swans to an intense annual noise event.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Catherine J Payne
Tim S Jessop
Patrick-Jean Guay
Michele Johnstone
Megan Feore
Raoul A Mulder
author_sort Catherine J Payne
title Population, behavioural and physiological responses of an urban population of black swans to an intense annual noise event.
title_short Population, behavioural and physiological responses of an urban population of black swans to an intense annual noise event.
title_full Population, behavioural and physiological responses of an urban population of black swans to an intense annual noise event.
title_fullStr Population, behavioural and physiological responses of an urban population of black swans to an intense annual noise event.
title_full_unstemmed Population, behavioural and physiological responses of an urban population of black swans to an intense annual noise event.
title_sort population, behavioural and physiological responses of an urban population of black swans to an intense annual noise event.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Wild animals in urban environments are exposed to a broad range of human activities that have the potential to disturb their life history and behaviour. Wildlife responses to disturbance can range from emigration to modified behaviour, or elevated stress, but these responses are rarely evaluated in concert. We simultaneously examined population, behavioural and hormonal responses of an urban population of black swans Cygnus atratus before, during and after an annual disturbance event involving large crowds and intense noise, the Australian Formula One Grand Prix. Black swan population numbers were lowest one week before the event and rose gradually over the course of the study, peaking after the event, suggesting that the disturbance does not trigger mass emigration. We also found no difference in the proportion of time spent on key behaviours such as locomotion, foraging, resting or self-maintenance over the course of the study. However, basal and capture stress-induced corticosterone levels showed significant variation, consistent with a modest physiological response. Basal plasma corticosterone levels were highest before the event and decreased over the course of the study. Capture-induced stress levels peaked during the Grand Prix and then also declined over the remainder of the study. Our results suggest that even intensely noisy and apparently disruptive events may have relatively low measurable short-term impact on population numbers, behaviour or physiology in urban populations with apparently high tolerance to anthropogenic disturbance. Nevertheless, the potential long-term impact of such disturbance on reproductive success, individual fitness and population health will need to be carefully evaluated.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3443219?pdf=render
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