Evaluating the impacts of human-mediated disturbances on species’ behaviour and interactions

Developing effective conservation strategies requires an empirical understanding of species' responses to human-mediated disturbances. Observable responses are typically limited to dramatic changes such as wildlife population declines or range shifts. However, preceding these obvious response...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Frey, Sandra
Other Authors: Volpe, John
Format: Others
Language:English
en
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dspace.library.uvic.ca//handle/1828/9963
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spelling ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-99632018-08-28T17:49:25Z Evaluating the impacts of human-mediated disturbances on species’ behaviour and interactions Frey, Sandra Volpe, John Fisher, Jason Thomas Camera Trapping Carnivores Community Ecology Behaviour Human Disturbance Developing effective conservation strategies requires an empirical understanding of species' responses to human-mediated disturbances. Observable responses are typically limited to dramatic changes such as wildlife population declines or range shifts. However, preceding these obvious responses, more subtle responses may signal larger-scale future change, including changes in species' behaviours and interspecific interactions. Disturbance-induced shifts to species' diel activity patterns may disrupt mechanisms of niche partitioning along the 24-hour time axis, altering community structure via altered competitive interactions. I investigate the main questions and methods of analysis applicable to camera-trap data for furthering our understanding of temporal dynamics in animal communities. I apply these methods to evaluate the impacts of human-mediated disturbance on species' activity patterns and temporal niche partitioning in two separate studies, focusing on responses in the mammalian carnivore community. In the Canadian Rocky Mountain carnivore guild, species alter diel activities in relation to anthropogenic landscape development, although these shifts may be manifesting through indirect biotic effects instead of direct responses to human disturbance. Mesocarnivore species on a mixed-use landscape featuring anthropogenic land-use and introduced free-ranging dogs (Canis familiaris) shift activities in relation to spatiotemporal dog activity. Native carnivores partition diel activities differently on open landscapes of enhanced predation risk but abundant prey resources. Detecting shifts in species' temporal behaviours and competitive interactions may enable identification of potential precursors of population declines and shifting community assemblages, providing us with opportunities to pre-emptively manage against such biodiversity losses on human-modified landscapes. Graduate 2018-08-27T17:27:48Z 2018-08-27T17:27:48Z 2018 2018-08-27 Thesis https://dspace.library.uvic.ca//handle/1828/9963 Frey, S., Fisher, J.T., Burton, A.C. and Volpe, J.P., 2017. Investigating animal activity patterns and temporal niche partitioning using camera‐trap data: challenges and opportunities. Remote Sensing in Ecology and Conservation, 3(3), pp.123-132. English en Available to the World Wide Web application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language English
en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Camera Trapping
Carnivores
Community Ecology
Behaviour
Human Disturbance
spellingShingle Camera Trapping
Carnivores
Community Ecology
Behaviour
Human Disturbance
Frey, Sandra
Evaluating the impacts of human-mediated disturbances on species’ behaviour and interactions
description Developing effective conservation strategies requires an empirical understanding of species' responses to human-mediated disturbances. Observable responses are typically limited to dramatic changes such as wildlife population declines or range shifts. However, preceding these obvious responses, more subtle responses may signal larger-scale future change, including changes in species' behaviours and interspecific interactions. Disturbance-induced shifts to species' diel activity patterns may disrupt mechanisms of niche partitioning along the 24-hour time axis, altering community structure via altered competitive interactions. I investigate the main questions and methods of analysis applicable to camera-trap data for furthering our understanding of temporal dynamics in animal communities. I apply these methods to evaluate the impacts of human-mediated disturbance on species' activity patterns and temporal niche partitioning in two separate studies, focusing on responses in the mammalian carnivore community. In the Canadian Rocky Mountain carnivore guild, species alter diel activities in relation to anthropogenic landscape development, although these shifts may be manifesting through indirect biotic effects instead of direct responses to human disturbance. Mesocarnivore species on a mixed-use landscape featuring anthropogenic land-use and introduced free-ranging dogs (Canis familiaris) shift activities in relation to spatiotemporal dog activity. Native carnivores partition diel activities differently on open landscapes of enhanced predation risk but abundant prey resources. Detecting shifts in species' temporal behaviours and competitive interactions may enable identification of potential precursors of population declines and shifting community assemblages, providing us with opportunities to pre-emptively manage against such biodiversity losses on human-modified landscapes. === Graduate
author2 Volpe, John
author_facet Volpe, John
Frey, Sandra
author Frey, Sandra
author_sort Frey, Sandra
title Evaluating the impacts of human-mediated disturbances on species’ behaviour and interactions
title_short Evaluating the impacts of human-mediated disturbances on species’ behaviour and interactions
title_full Evaluating the impacts of human-mediated disturbances on species’ behaviour and interactions
title_fullStr Evaluating the impacts of human-mediated disturbances on species’ behaviour and interactions
title_full_unstemmed Evaluating the impacts of human-mediated disturbances on species’ behaviour and interactions
title_sort evaluating the impacts of human-mediated disturbances on species’ behaviour and interactions
publishDate 2018
url https://dspace.library.uvic.ca//handle/1828/9963
work_keys_str_mv AT freysandra evaluatingtheimpactsofhumanmediateddisturbancesonspeciesbehaviourandinteractions
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