Diurnal pastoralism does not reduce juvenile recruitment nor elevate allostatic load in spotted hyenas
1. Anthropogenic activity can have substantial effects on wildlife. These effects may vary according to the characteristics of the activity and the species involved. While effects on behavior are well-studied, studies of effects on fitness and physiology are scarce, particularly for group-living spe...
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Zusammenfassung: | 1. Anthropogenic activity can have substantial effects on wildlife. These
effects may vary according to the characteristics of the activity and the
species involved. While effects on behavior are well-studied, studies of
effects on fitness and physiology are scarce, particularly for
group-living species. 2. We exploited a natural experimental setup to
investigate the effect of diurnal pastoralism on juvenile recruitment and
allostatic load in a population of free-ranging spotted hyenas in the
Ngorongoro Crater, Tanzania, over a 24-year period. 3. Pastoralism was
restricted to the territories of two of the eight study clans, allowing us
to compare juvenile recruitment in exposed and unexposed clans. We also
compared fecal glucocorticoid metabolite concentrations (fGMC) – a
biomarker of an organism’s allostatic load – between exposed and unexposed
clans using 975 fecal samples from 475 hyenas. 4. We found no detectable
difference in juvenile recruitment nor fGMC between the exposed and
unexposed clans, indicating that the pastoralism had no substantial
deleterious effect on the spotted hyenas. The lack of a deleterious effect
likely stems from the combined effect of the predictable and undisruptive
nature of the pastoralism, the socio-ecology of spotted hyenas, and the
Ngorongoro Crater’s consistently abundant prey. 5. Our findings
demonstrate that exposure to anthropogenic activity may be compatible with
the persistence of certain group-living species, especially if the overlap
between the species’ critical behaviors and the activity is limited. Our
study thereby provides new perspectives for ecologists, conservation
biologists, and stakeholders who seek to assess human-wildlife conflicts
and balance the needs of local human communities and wildlife. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.dv41ns226 |