Movement activity and space use : how does the moose react when the tourists come?

Fear of predation is a major selective pressure for prey species and, although important for survival, can have adverse effects on the well-being of the animals. Human disturbance has been shown to elicit the same behavioural and physiological responses, in particular in hunted species. Using GPS-da...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Höög, Nora
Formato: H2
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: SLU/Dept. of Wildlife, Fish and Environmental Studies 2020
Materias:
_version_ 1855572699728838656
author Höög, Nora
author_browse Höög, Nora
author_facet Höög, Nora
author_sort Höög, Nora
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description Fear of predation is a major selective pressure for prey species and, although important for survival, can have adverse effects on the well-being of the animals. Human disturbance has been shown to elicit the same behavioural and physiological responses, in particular in hunted species. Using GPS-data from a heavily hunted moose population in northern Sweden, I investigated differences in habitat selection and activity patterns between two valleys contrasting in human disturbance, during both peak and low tourism seasons. The effects of temperature, precipitation, and wind speed were also considered. I found moose to alter their habitat utilisation to use more protective habitats during the peak tourism seasons in the valley with high human disturbance, whereas open habitats were used more in the valley with low disturbance. I found no evidence for activity patterns being impacted by tourism, and the weather variables were of low importance. My study suggests that moose habitat selection is indeed affected by increased human disturbance. There is a need for studies on the long-term impacts on fitness on this displacement of moose into protective habitats. In addition, bodily measurements are required to assess physiological stress responses that are not visible in the behaviour of the animals. These findings, in combination with future studies, can help managers with the planning of further recreational sprawl into moose habitats.
format H2
id RepoSLU16150
institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
language Inglés
publishDate 2020
publishDateSort 2020
publisher SLU/Dept. of Wildlife, Fish and Environmental Studies
publisherStr SLU/Dept. of Wildlife, Fish and Environmental Studies
record_format eprints
spelling RepoSLU161502020-10-10T01:01:44Z Movement activity and space use : how does the moose react when the tourists come? Höög, Nora moose Alces alces home range habitat selection tourism human disturbance activity acceleration movement speed seasons sunlight phases weather Fear of predation is a major selective pressure for prey species and, although important for survival, can have adverse effects on the well-being of the animals. Human disturbance has been shown to elicit the same behavioural and physiological responses, in particular in hunted species. Using GPS-data from a heavily hunted moose population in northern Sweden, I investigated differences in habitat selection and activity patterns between two valleys contrasting in human disturbance, during both peak and low tourism seasons. The effects of temperature, precipitation, and wind speed were also considered. I found moose to alter their habitat utilisation to use more protective habitats during the peak tourism seasons in the valley with high human disturbance, whereas open habitats were used more in the valley with low disturbance. I found no evidence for activity patterns being impacted by tourism, and the weather variables were of low importance. My study suggests that moose habitat selection is indeed affected by increased human disturbance. There is a need for studies on the long-term impacts on fitness on this displacement of moose into protective habitats. In addition, bodily measurements are required to assess physiological stress responses that are not visible in the behaviour of the animals. These findings, in combination with future studies, can help managers with the planning of further recreational sprawl into moose habitats. SLU/Dept. of Wildlife, Fish and Environmental Studies 2020 H2 eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/16150/
spellingShingle moose
Alces alces
home range
habitat selection
tourism
human disturbance
activity
acceleration
movement
speed
seasons
sunlight phases
weather
Höög, Nora
Movement activity and space use : how does the moose react when the tourists come?
title Movement activity and space use : how does the moose react when the tourists come?
title_full Movement activity and space use : how does the moose react when the tourists come?
title_fullStr Movement activity and space use : how does the moose react when the tourists come?
title_full_unstemmed Movement activity and space use : how does the moose react when the tourists come?
title_short Movement activity and space use : how does the moose react when the tourists come?
title_sort movement activity and space use : how does the moose react when the tourists come?
topic moose
Alces alces
home range
habitat selection
tourism
human disturbance
activity
acceleration
movement
speed
seasons
sunlight phases
weather