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Acceleration Data Reveal Behavioural Responses to Hunting Risk in Scandinavian Brown Bears
Acceleration Data Reveal Behavioural Responses to Hunting Risk in Scandinavian Brown Bears
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Acceleration Data Reveal Behavioural Responses to Hunting Risk in Scandinavian Brown Bears
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Acceleration Data Reveal Behavioural Responses to Hunting Risk in Scandinavian Brown Bears
Acceleration Data Reveal Behavioural Responses to Hunting Risk in Scandinavian Brown Bears

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Acceleration Data Reveal Behavioural Responses to Hunting Risk in Scandinavian Brown Bears
Acceleration Data Reveal Behavioural Responses to Hunting Risk in Scandinavian Brown Bears
Journal Article

Acceleration Data Reveal Behavioural Responses to Hunting Risk in Scandinavian Brown Bears

2025
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Overview
Predation may indirectly influence prey's fitness and population dynamics through behavioural adjustments in response to perceived predation risk. These non‐consumptive effects of predation can also arise from hunting by humans, but they remain less documented. Advances in biologging allow detailed assessments of the activity budgets of elusive wildlife, increasing the potential to uncover the non‐consumptive effects of human activities on animals. We used tri‐axial accelerometry to record the daily activity of 24 Scandinavian brown bears (20 females and 4 males) from a heavily hunted population in Sweden, for a total of 29 bear‐years (2015–2022). We used a random forest algorithm trained with observations of captive brown bears to classify the accelerometry data into four behaviours, running, walking, feeding and resting, with an overall precision of 95%. We then used these classifications to evaluate changes in bear activity budgets before and during the hunting season. Bears exhibited a bimodal daily activity pattern, being most active at dusk and dawn and resting around midday and midnight. However, during the hunting season, males became more nocturnal compared to before the hunting season, suggesting a proactive behavioural adjustment to reduce encounters with hunters. Females showed the opposite pattern and had a higher probability of being active during the day, potentially to increase nutritional gains before denning. Additionally, daily number of running bouts did not vary between the pre‐hunting and hunting seasons in both sexes, but females' proportion of running bouts occurring during legal hunting hours was higher during the hunting season than prior to it, which suggests a reactive behavioural adjustment to encounters with hunters. Detailed assessments of wild animal behaviours, allowed through recording of movement data at high frequencies, have the potential to improve our understanding of the impacts of human activity on wildlife. We used accelerometry data to evaluate behavioural adjustments to temporal variation in hunting risk in Scandinavian brown bears. We find that male bears become more nocturnal after the onset of the hunting season, while female bears do the opposite by becoming more diurnal. These results suggest sex‐differences in brown bear responses to hunting risk.