A paper published on Friday in the scientific journal Trends in Ecology and
Evolution raises questions about how the presence of humans affects wild animals
and their susceptibility to predators. For the paper, researchers at the
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) examined data of observed animal
behavior from scientists around the world. Dan Blumstein, professor and chair of
the department of ecology and evolutionary biology at UCLA, is the corresponding
author of the paper, “How Nature-Based Tourism Might Increase Prey Vulnerability
to Predators.”
With ecotourism, or nature-based tourism, Blumstein told Outside on Monday,
there is evidence that animals can become more tolerant of humans. “The question
we’re asking is, ‘Does this mean they become more vulnerable to predators?’” he
said. “The degree to which animals become dumb around humans is a really
interesting question.”
The paper examines the link between wild animals’ gradual domestication
through interaction with humans in high-traffic areas like wilderness preserves.
Due to their close proximity to humans, these animals live in a kind of
protective net from predators. As they breed, they pass down domestic traits,
changing the species generation by generation. Blumstein’s paper asks whether
this poses a danger to the animals both immediately and in the long-term,
especially if the protection that human presence provides from predators is
removed.
While these changes may not seem as critical for species like deer or
squirrels, the stakes are higher when dealing with already-stressed populations,
specifically endangered species. For at-risk populations, the loss of several
animals (due to domestication and its impact on the animal’s ability to escape
predators) could result in a stable population moving into decline, Blumstein
said. He also said that the paper’s results call for additional research to
discover a timeline of when these changes take place.
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