Wildlife alter their behaviors in a trade-off between consuming food and fear of becoming food themselves. The risk allocation hypothesis posits that variation in the scale, intensity, and longevity of predation threats can influence the magnitude of antipredator behavioral responses. Hunting by humans represents a threat to wildlife thought to be perceived as similar to those of a top predator, although hunting intensity and duration vary widely around the world. Here we evaluate the effects of hunting pressure on wildlife by comparing how two communities of mammals under different management schemes differ in their relative abundance and response to humans. Using camera traps to survey wildlife across disturbance levels (yards, farms, for...
Abstract Landscape characteristics, seasonal changes in the environment, and daylight conditions inf...
Landscape characteristics, seasonal changes in the environment, and daylight conditions influence sp...
Hunting by humans can be a potent driver of selection for morphological and life history traits in w...
Wildlife alter their behaviors in a trade-off between consuming food and fear of becoming food thems...
Predator-prey theory predicts that in the presence of multiple types of predators using a common pre...
Spatiotemporal variation in predation risk arises from interactions between landscape heterogeneity,...
Predation risk is known to evoke behavioural responses in prey animals, and prey are often faced wit...
Understanding animal space us is a fundamental concern in Ecology. Predator-prey interactions are a ...
Pedators can indirectly affect prey survival and reproduction by evoking costly anti-predator respon...
Predator avoidance depends on prey being able to discern how risk varies in space and time, but this...
The recolonization of human-dominated landscapes by large carnivores has been followed with consider...
Perceived predation risk and the resulting antipredator behaviour varies across space, time and pred...
Human related mortality is a major threat for large carnivores all over the world and there is incre...
Humans are increasingly acknowledged as apex predators that shape landscapes of fear to which herbiv...
Human disturbance directly affects animal populations but indirect effects of disturbance on species...
Abstract Landscape characteristics, seasonal changes in the environment, and daylight conditions inf...
Landscape characteristics, seasonal changes in the environment, and daylight conditions influence sp...
Hunting by humans can be a potent driver of selection for morphological and life history traits in w...
Wildlife alter their behaviors in a trade-off between consuming food and fear of becoming food thems...
Predator-prey theory predicts that in the presence of multiple types of predators using a common pre...
Spatiotemporal variation in predation risk arises from interactions between landscape heterogeneity,...
Predation risk is known to evoke behavioural responses in prey animals, and prey are often faced wit...
Understanding animal space us is a fundamental concern in Ecology. Predator-prey interactions are a ...
Pedators can indirectly affect prey survival and reproduction by evoking costly anti-predator respon...
Predator avoidance depends on prey being able to discern how risk varies in space and time, but this...
The recolonization of human-dominated landscapes by large carnivores has been followed with consider...
Perceived predation risk and the resulting antipredator behaviour varies across space, time and pred...
Human related mortality is a major threat for large carnivores all over the world and there is incre...
Humans are increasingly acknowledged as apex predators that shape landscapes of fear to which herbiv...
Human disturbance directly affects animal populations but indirect effects of disturbance on species...
Abstract Landscape characteristics, seasonal changes in the environment, and daylight conditions inf...
Landscape characteristics, seasonal changes in the environment, and daylight conditions influence sp...
Hunting by humans can be a potent driver of selection for morphological and life history traits in w...